If you want to keep your MKV file uncompressed and preserve the lossless audio, you don’t actually need to “convert” it to AVCHD — most standalone Blu-ray players can’t read MKV directly, but you can author a Blu-ray structure without re-encoding.jt5298 wrote: ↑Sat Mar 11, 2023 7:12 pmI'm new to using Makemkv. What is the process of taking the mkv file to burn to a blu-ray disc to play on a standalone player? I don't want to re-encode the file otherwise what's the point. I want the original uncompressed video and lossless audio. Is there a program that will convert the mkv file to avchd to burn on a disc without loss of quality?
Thanks
Try tools like tsMuxeR or MultiAVCHD: they can take the MKV and remux it into a proper BDMV/ISO folder ready for burning. Just make sure the video codec is H.264 and the audio format (like DTS-HD MA or TrueHD) is supported by your player.
Also, if you’re dealing with large MKV files and want to automate processing or metadata management, this short guide might help you streamline the workflow https://sora-ai.one