bitrate matters

Begonnen von Oldman13, November 15, 2023, 08:58:49

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Oldman13

As usual I edited with TS Doctor a video file, recorded from satellite. Since the recording was rather long, I decided to split it in two parts with TS Doctor. When I added the durations of these parts, I came up precisely with the duration of the original file, which of course should be. However, when adding the file sizes I came out with a different value. Why is that? The answer is that data rates / bitrates were different for the original ts file and the two split parts. I never realized that TS Doctor has influence on that.

Mam

Zitat von: Oldman13 am November 15, 2023, 08:58:49he answer is that data rates / bitrates were different for the original ts file and the two split parts. I never realized that TS Doctor has influence on that.
TS Doc does not change anything to the bitrate.
What you see is just a difference in compression rates. Some scenes squeeze better than others so the bitrate looks like it would be less/fewer. Imagine a still standing pic, or the end titles with usually black background. They compress very well (if there is not a lot of noise in the pic) and seem to have a rate of almost 0.
So, it is illegal and not helpful trying to compare the two parts because they do not have the same content.

Oldman13

#2
Thanks for info. In the picture you find the properties of the 3 files. Left is the original ts file,which was already edited by TS Doctor.

Cypheros

Use Tools/Expert Tools/TS Bandwidth-Meter to see how the bitrate is changing.

Oldman13

Thanks for the reaction. I tried to put in my reaction an image. I see that image if I am logged in, but I do not see it when I am only a visitor. Is that correct?

Cypheros

Yes, only forum members are allowed to see attachements.


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