On Oct 4, 2023, at 10:59 AM, Mark Dm wrote:
>
> Thanks Laine and Andrew . I do believe that yadif=1 is what I am looking
> for. After googling it I see so many others that express their love for it
> so that sounds right!
>
> Thanks
>
Yadif = Yet Another DeInterlacing Filter.
:)
L. Lee
Thanks Laine and Andrew . I do believe that yadif=1 is what I am looking
for. After googling it I see so many others that express their love for it
so that sounds right!
Thanks
On Wed, Oct 4, 2023 at 3:02 AM Andrew Randrianasulu
wrote:
> ср, 4 окт. 2023 г., 10:34 Mark Dm :
>
> > Its NOT
ср, 4 окт. 2023 г., 10:34 Mark Dm :
> Its NOT Telecine. It is Digital Video 8 video at 27.97 FPS
> I am looking specifically for the setting that derives the 59.94FPS from
> the 27.97 FPS source with such beauty and without deinterlace.
>
this answer mentions yadif=1
> On Oct 4, 2023, at 3:43 AM, Laine wrote:
>
> ffmpeg -analyzeduration 100M -probesize 100M -loglevel error -stats -i
> input.ts -map 0:0 -filter:v scale=-1:1440:flags=neighbor -c:v
> h264_videotoolbox -b:v 2600k -color_primaries:v bt709 -color_trc:v bt709
> -colorspace:v bt709
> On Oct 4, 2023, at 2:34 AM, Mark Dm wrote:
>
> Its NOT Telecine. It is Digital Video 8 video at 27.97 FPS
> I am looking specifically for the setting that derives the 59.94FPS from
> the 27.97 FPS source with such beauty and without deinterlace.
>
Oh, you mean 29.97 FPS? If you still have
Its NOT Telecine. It is Digital Video 8 video at 27.97 FPS
I am looking specifically for the setting that derives the 59.94FPS from
the 27.97 FPS source with such beauty and without deinterlace.
On Wed, Oct 4, 2023 at 12:28 AM Laine wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Oct 4, 2023, at 1:36 AM, Mark Dm wrote:
>
> On Oct 4, 2023, at 1:36 AM, Mark Dm wrote:
>
> I had some DVD Video that I had converted using ffmpeg some years ago. What
> I did was converted NTSC DVD video (4x3) to 960x720 @59.94 FPS and the
> result was incredible. I had found a forum some time later where another
> user claimed he
I had some DVD Video that I had converted using ffmpeg some years ago. What
I did was converted NTSC DVD video (4x3) to 960x720 @59.94 FPS and the
result was incredible. I had found a forum some time later where another
user claimed he had done the same and he too had incredible results. The