Handbrake is a freeware video transcoder that until recently was best known and used among Mac users. The later Windows versions however are much improved, improving the GUI and fixing most nasty bugs. In this article we will guide you through the steps of creating an mkv or mp4 file using H264 codec. Handbrake now accepts most video files as input but in our example we will use a DVD disc as a source.
Step 1 :-
As
Handbrake does not support decrypting a DVD you should either use
AnyDVD or rip the DVD to your hard disk first.It will make the whole process faster and you will avoid unnecessarily stressing your DVD drive for all the hours the encoding needs to finish.Rip a DVD to your hard disk using
DVDFab HD Decrypter ( Click
HERE for Guide ).
Step 2 :-
After you have ripped the DVD click on
Source (1) and select
DVD/VIDEO_TS folder. From the presets select
Normal (2), unless you want your file to be playable in one of the special devices listed like a
PS3 or an
Xbox360.
Step 3 :-
After you've loaded the video click Browse and select the
output file (1). You can choose between
mkv,
mp4,
ogm and
avi in the
output settings (2), then click the
Video tab (3) and move to the
Next step.
Step 4 :-
Here make sure
H.264 is selected as the
Video codec (1) and that 2-Pass encoding with a turbo first pass is enabled (2). Finally set the
target size (3) to what better suits your storing needs,
for example 700MB. Keep in mind that if you want to create big high quality files (over 2GB) it would be better to just select the Constant Quality Rate profile and set the Constant Quality to something like 65%. Move to the Audio & Subtitles tab and to the
Next step to continue.
Step 5 :-
Select the
audio source and codec (1). If you want to have stereo audio use the AAC codec and Dolby Pro Logic II for mixdown, otherwise to keep the original 5.1 audio of the DVD select the AC3 codec. Here you can also select if you want to include
Subtitles (2) in your video. Finally click
Start (3) to start the transcoding process.
Step 6 :-
The console window that opens after you click start allows you to see the progress of the encoding process. Depending on the speed of your CPU in a few hours your video will be ready.