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Method 3; All at once ...

There are, in my opinion, only 3 methods for ripping a DVD to a DivX file.
On this page I'll show you how to rip and convert the DVD audio and video in one go. This method can fail due to distorded images - see Method 1 or Method 2 to fix this.

Tip: Ripping subtitles is a cool feature too, take a look at the subtitles ripping page.

Note: This method has been tested with Windows 95, 98, 98SE, ME, XP and 2000.

Tip: If you're unfamiliar with DivX please read the DivX intro page.

Note: WMA is sometimes used with DivX. I cannot advise you to use it! Rather use MP3!

Note: before starting the conversion, you might (if you haven't done so) want to install a MP3 codec like that one from Radium.

Read the Disclaimer!

Note: We have posted enhanced methods for DVD ripping at Tweaking4All for MacOS X, Windows, and Linux (Ubuntu). You'll find a solution to the question "which title should I rip" there as well, also offering a solution to the so called "99 titles problem". There you'll also find an article on how to optimize your video encoder settings.

Download DivX

Download the DivX codec here ...

Doing it all in one go ...

Before you start: Make sure the DVDRom drive's region matches the required regioncode for the DVDRom and make sure the DivX codec is installed. Use some tool like ZoneSelector (4.1 support win2000!) to set the proper region.

1. Use DVD-playback software to play a bit of the movie (this will help unlock the drive).

2. Start FlasKMPEG version 0.593 or better (download version 0.593 here).

3. Open the DVDRom with FlaskMPEG.

Select "File", "Open DVD".

In the file dialog, open the directory where SmartRipper copied the DVD files.

Select the IFO usually "VTS_01_0.IFO". Now click "Open".

4. Select Video, Audio and subtitle track.

Now FlasKMPEG opens a dialog so you can select the disered MPEG stream, Audio stream and subtitles. You can click on the subtitle you want or click again on the selected subtitle to disable it...

Note: You better skip the subtitles untill later. MicroDVD supports subtitles in a better way. FlasKMPEG blends the text into the video and will be always visible, where as MicroDVD gives you an option: do I want to see the subtitles or not ! Take a look at the subtitles ripping page.

Select movie-fragment, audio languge and if you like subtitles ...

When done select "FlasK this DVD!" - FlasKMPEG will now briefly analyze the IFO file.

5. Setting the output file format.

Select the menu "Options" and make sure that "AVI" is checked at the "Select Output Format" menu.

Note: FlasKMPEG supports other plugins like the Cinema Craft encoder (excellent for MPEG compression!). More information can be found on the FlasKMPEG website.

Select the menu "Options" again and select "Global Project Options (Export Movie Settings)".

Global project options ...

Note: now write down the "Time Base (fps)" value - you will need it if you want to use subtitles later on.

Now we have to do some settings here which can be pretty tricky. This is the way I do it, but you can always try to figure out what works best for your purposes.

If the current tab is not "Video" then select it now. Click "Show Output Pad". If the image looks garbled: please rip the DVD once more with SmartRipper - something went wrong here!

Click "Reset settings". (The preview will now appear in it's normal size)

Play a bit with the crop option if you want to, when done click "Hide". Note you can drag the window a bit up so you'll see the full image. I usually remove the black bars on the top and bottom of a movie.

Tip: On the "DivX rip intro" page, you can find more info on the commonly used screen resolutions for DivX.

Select the tab "Audio". I usually uncheck the "Same as input" option at the "Sampling Frequency" section and then check the 48000Hz option (which is the usual frequency used for AC3).

Also make sure the "decode Audio" option is selected in the "Audio Mode" section. Next check the "Same as input" if you like.

Audio settings

At the "Post Processing" tab you don't need to change anything. The crop settings are done at the "Video" tab, so don't change it. You might want to check if "HQ Bicubis Filtering"and "Keep aspect ratio" are checked since this renders best quality.

Post processing ...

Select the "Files" tab to set the location of the ripped result. Here you can enter a different location if you don't want to use the default location (C:\VideoOut.AVI).

At the "General"-tab you don't need to change anything unless you want your computer to auto-shutdown when done.

Select "OK".

Select the menu "Options" - "Output Format Options".

Codec slection time :)

Here we can select the codec we wish to use.

At "Video" click "Select Codec".

Note: You can select any codec you want, just make sure the codec is VIDEO-ONLY (DVMPEG for example requires this). For best results choose a DivX MPEG4 codec.

Select a DivX codec: here the original ;-) codec Select a DivX codec - here the codec by DivX.com
the original DivX ;-) codec and the DivX.com codec

There are a lot of possible settings here. I always try the LOW-MOTION codec first which is only available with the original ;-) DivX codec. The new DivX.com codec does not have this option.

The "Configure..." button unleashes the additional compression settings window.

Leave "Keyframe every 10 seconds" the way it is. Don't change "Smoothness" either (usually set to 100 - crispness).

Since not all movies are the same in length (eg. minutes playing time), you must calculate the bitrate for your DVD-rip to fit on one single CDR/CDRW. The higher the bitrate, the better the video result. However the higher the bitrate, the bigger the resulting AVI-file. "Data Rate (Kilobits per Second)" might there for be changed. See the Bitrates page for details.

Select "OK" to return to the codec mainwindow.

Select "OK" once more.

At "Audio" click "Select Codec". Again, you can select any codec you want.

For this purpose, select "MPEG Layer-3", set to "96 KBit/s, 44,100 Hz, Stereo".

Select "OK".

To finish these settings click "OK".

6. Start the conversion.

Select the Menu "Run ..." - "Start Conversion".

Uncheck the "Display Output" option to gain a little bit of speed. I'm not sure if it will gain speed, I noticed something weird here: display output tends to improve performance slightly.... You can also set task priority. I found the latter to be not that very meaningfull... There is no use setting it to highest when using DivX,...

While converting you can select "Cancel".
The frames/audio that are converted so far, are stored in the file so you can check the quality if you're experimenting. Usually I let it convert about 3%.

Depending on your computer's CPU power and memory, conversion can take quite a while. To show you some examples see these conversion times measured on my own computers, for one and the same movie (about 85 minutes movie time);

300 Mhz Pentium II - >12 hours + 26 minutes copying
500 Mhz Pentium III - app. 8 hours + 24 minutes copying
700 Mhz AMD Athlon - app. 5 hours + 15 minutes copying

Copying speed depends not only on CPU speed ...

Once this is done, the final DivX movie is ready for use.

Check out the subtitle ripping page as well if you want to use the subtitles.


 

 


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