VSO ConvertXtoVideo is an across the board video converter which guarantees the top picture quality and quick changes. It is full offline installer standalone setup of VSO ConvertXtoVideo Ultimate. You can also give input to the developers on the VSO forum, and get feedback, and ask for features, many of which were included in the new 4.0 release.VSO ConvertXtoVideo Ultimate Free Download Latest Version. Remember ConvertXtoDVD was also free at one time, the program really took off as to development when they started charging a comparatively small fee for it. The forums aren't all that helpful either, not when compared to the VSO forums particularly. Right now it still struggles greatly with even basic things like audio and video sync on many files types, including AVI's, VOB's, and etc. I hope it continues to become more refined and better with more file types over time. It's a pretty cool for a free program no doubt. However I love the open source projects like DVDFlick. It's simply a superior program as of now. But it produced superior output.Ĭonsidering the clunkiness of DVDFlicks's file format handling and the handling of the details of such, and it still took longer to encode the file than CX2D with either setting anyway, I still choose CX2D. By no means was it better than DVDFlick in some 'night & day' way. it's still not a huge difference, I really had to study lines, details, background clarity, etc, to notice it. I compared it again on 3 different 1 minutes scenes with the DVDFlick file, as well as various random scenes on both.ĬonvertXtoDVD is simply a better picture quality when properly configured. This time it produced a 4.5 gig ISO(compared to 2.3 last time) with the same 4.7 gig DVD size as a target. So I've been reading some stuff by a ConvertXtoDVD 'guru' on the VSO forums about settings and re-encoded the same 4.5 gig MKV file with adjusted settings in CX2D, same multi-pass with Lanczos filter but on an encoding setting(set it to SP since this movie is ~90 minutes in length) that will produce a larger output file. but I've been playing around with this 'comparison' stuff some more. I'm not sure if anyone if even reading this. Seems counterintuitive that a smaller ISO file would have the same, if not slightly better image, but that's what my eyes are seeing.īetween the two I prefer the one than can handle the subs and the audio tracks correctly, and did the encode in less time even on multi-pass. I then checked a 'busier' action scene and I think there was a clearer image of faces on the ConvertXtoDVD file, but only slightly better. Without the menu differences as I switched between the two files, I could not have told you which was which based on image quality with a gun to my head. As well as moving around the movie and checking at random. I have played both of them in VLC on the same 1 minute scene over and over looking for a difference in quality. It created an ISO that was 2.3 gigs in size for a target of 4.7 gigs. It excels at dealing with the details of many file formats. It filled the disc up no doubt.ĬonvertXtoDVD encoded both the subtitles and the extra audio tracks no sweat. It created an ISO that was just around 4.6 gigs on a target DVD-R of 4.7 gigs. Then I took the latest(or damn close) ConvertXtoDVD(4.0.9.322) and encoded the very same MKV on multi-pass with the Lanczos filter.ĭVD Flick dropped the integrated subs, they were not encoded, it dropped the other audio tracks and only kept the English one. I just downloaded the latest DVD Flick(1.3.0.7 build 738) and encoded a 4.5 gig 720p MKV file with encoding set to 'best'.
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