![]() ![]() If you set 8.5Mb/s, but did you actually achieve 8.5Mb/s? What does mediainfo say about that output file? Various elementary classes singing at the Christmas concert in the school hall. too much motion, whip pans, shaky footage) the content is too complex for to the encoder to handle e.g. Those blockyness is a sign of overcompression for MPEG2, relatively too low bitrate (ie. If your source had noise to begin with, you might consider preprocessing with a denoiser ![]() Was it lowlight? Was it grainy to begin with? grain acts as noise and is very hard on the encoder. But what kind of content do you have? Was it handheld & shaky, or stabilized with a rig and tripod? I used the standard settings that Premiere Elements provides with the bitrate set for the highest quality (8.5b/s if I remember correctly). Yes, I know there's going to be a downgrade in quality, but I would expect it to match the quality of a commercial DVD movie? Is that reasonable? OverallBitRate_Maximum/String : 33.0 Mbpsīy bad I mean blocky and what I would explain as grainy. Here's the info from the program you recommended I run: Per the program you requested I run, I found out that I am wrong it is 30i and not 30p. in premiere pro you have to right click on the assets in pp and "interpret footage as" 30p. Did you tell elements it's 30P and not 30i? no program can identify 30p from a hv20/30/40 correctly. ![]()
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