#Warpsharp 2 tutorial full version#
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#Warpsharp 2 tutorial code#
But I'm talking about carefully processed captures.Lexerd Navigon 7200T TrueVue Around Windows GPS Leave Protector Qualified Pack Lark 6 Make to the above code where you installed devices. At peak I've never seen the meter exceed 7000 or so., and very rarely that high. In my own experience, I note that VHS that has been cleaned up really well and not oversharpened plays continuously at between 45 kbps, even in many scenes with movement, and many "steady" scenes hover around 3500. A peak at over 8000 happening quite often would indicate either lots of continually very swift action and/or lots of noise. The "max" is a different matter, since the max sets the upper limit, which is seldom met unless it's too low to begin with. There there's that seriously bad flicker and what appears to be some sort of playback and/or capture problems - and add what seems to be tape noise - it all adds up to greater demands for higher bitrate. Much depends on the original encoder used, the condition of the master source, and on and on. Does that change the statement about this video being low bitrate? 5500 would be the target, which IMO is still a bit low for fast-action, full-frame MPEG2. The AVERAGE is 5,500kbps and it peaks at over 8,000kbps. By the way, I checked the bitrate and was wrong, Sanlyn. But these scripts should be simpler if possible. I was bustin' your chops a little bit on that last post. Goes to show you, transfer and cleanup is 5% inspiration and 95% perspiration. Sometimes you might lose a pixel or two somewhere, but it's usually noise anyway. Kinda clunky, but if you try to anticipate what stab will do you can end up pre-cropping and get a frame size that upsets those plugins that want to work with their 8x block sizes and whatnot. What you have to do is let Stab do its thing, then view the results, fix borders as needed in the script, and you're home free. Still a little grayish noise on the lefthand side, but likely that will go unnoticed. And stab does literally move the whole image, meaning that the borders get moved as well. Some of that grungy stuff in the flat backgrounds, it's a headache sometimes when it's in the original source. One h264 encoder and umpteen containers and codecs!! Ya gotta love it). Maybe the "mkv" container called for something that might not be on your PC (like Haali media splitter, maybe? Hell, who knows. Gorgeous and foolproof (when you know what you're doing) NeatVideo at low settings smooths the stabilized grain without blurring the video. #let's convert to RGB32 to finalize with Virtualdub for NeatVideo and Color CorrectionĬonvertToRGB32() The resulting AVI after Virtualdub is the final product. Mergechroma(awarpsharp2(depth=20)) #brings chroma inside lines# this setting was able to chisel out junk and show more small details# #let's fix the lines, the bleeding color, darken the new line and anti-alias, like so:ĪWarpSharp(depth=8) #thins lines. TTempSmooth(maxr=7, lthresh=25, strength=5)
#Add a little TTempSmooth (fluxsmooth also works) for the remaining stubborn flicker like so: #and now, ladies and gentlemen, I present MVDegrain3 from MVTools:īv1 = MAnalyse(super, isb = true, delta = 1, overlap=4)įv1 = MAnalyse(super, isb = false, delta = 1, overlap=4)īv2 = MAnalyse(super, isb = true, delta = 2, overlap=4)įv2 = MAnalyse(super, isb = false, delta = 2, overlap=4)īv3 = MAnalyse(super, isb = true, delta = 3, overlap=4)įv3 = MAnalyse(super, isb = false, delta = 3, overlap=4) If you prefer to blow out the darks, just increase Cont_y with ColorYUV. The filtered video used your same TIVTC, so it's not DVD-compliant (23.976 fps). I used a few goodies you probably haven't seen: I think I got most of it, but didn't address the remaining spots or hops (I was getting tired of finding new problems). The sample script posted above gives the video a kind of soft haze, looks almost out of focus in spots. Large clumps of shifting and fluttering grain, banding, low-bitrate artifacts, luma and chroma out of range for DVD (and almost out of range for PC video), strong red color cast, crippled blue, spots, dropouts, projector hop.and some really bad flicker. Can you guys take another look at it please? This is an official retail DVD rip which I am trying to restore. Sanlyn offered some great suggestions as well. I posted this sample a while back and PDR, I believe cleaned it up nicely.