I can confirm that I took a few mkv's that were created directly from a blu-ray (using makemkv of course) and used tsmuxer to get them back to an .iso and then a disc.setarip_old wrote:@GordoShum (ALF)
Since I've successfully done this many times (and the first post by "robneal81" in this thread confirms), I can only speculate that you are selecting something OTHER THAN "Blu-ray" from the lower portion ("Output") of the tsMuxer screen...
MKV back to DVD or Blu Ray
Re: MKV back to DVD or Blu Ray
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- Location: NH and FL
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Re: MKV back to DVD or Blu Ray
This is a great thread, thx!
I too want to move my ripped .MKV's back into .ISO's and burn backup
copies of some movie-DVDs, and the info here sounds like the ticket.
I noticed one reply, which was explaining the issue of single-layer vs dual-layer
blank DVDs. I'd heard of this, but needed a 'refresher course', so I googled on
Wikipedia and found this article, which explains details of 'DL' (dual-layer).
Hope this article is helpful to others:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DVD#Dual-layer_recording
[The URL above points into the relevant section to info about dual-layer.
The fuller article covers almost anything you'd want/need to know about
DVD media types, etc.]
That said, my goal will be to try to produce .ISO files that will fit on single-layer
media, as I suspect that using dual-layer might be more trouble than its worth,
so I'd like to avoid that whenever possible.
[Tried tsMuxR, but then learned that it seems to be BlueRay only!? e.g. the output
'STREAM' always seemed to be .m2ts file, which is not what I wanted...too large to
fit on 4.7GB. The webpage and docs are in Russian...they of course can be translated
but I haven't bothered to do that yet. Plus, I don't own BlueRay player (yet) either.]
Next I installed the FreeMake video converter mentioned in an earlier reply...
I then selected for input a .MKV file, then
chose 'DVD' icon, and the sub-option 'Create an .ISO (file-container)'. Nice.
[This software overall is IMPRESSIVE...looks simple to use, and nicely presented!]
Yes, as someone else mentions, it DOES have a much longer run time
(about 35 mins for a movie .MKV, on my quite-fast i7-CPU-ed laptop w/4.0-GB of ram),
but I rationalize that with fact that it chose to re-compress, which normally takes
3-5 times longer than de-compressing...so be patient. The resulting .ISO for
the chapters of a movie was reduced to about 1.6-GB, so it's easy to conclude that
indeed, it clearly was re-compressing. So far, this 'FreeMake' converter software looks
impressive...the install felt right, and the first output seems reasonable looking.
[I haven't yet burned the .ISO onto physical DVD-media, but will do that soon
and report back whether that newly burned DVD will play ok on my DVD-player.
In theory, it OUGHT to. (Update: Yep, it does, w/ one minor glitch...can't
select to enable any sub-titles...it keeps saying "Operation can't be performed
during playback, stop playback first".
This problem seems to be a menu-design glitch, from choosing
a 'motion-menu', using FreeMake v3.0.2. I burned a 2nd one, using
'text-menu' choice the next time, but it has the same issue.]
I've used their support-email system to seek advice on this problem, and
am waiting to hear back.
(It's not really a showstopper...I can view the movie fine, just not
with sub-titles.)
Cheers...
I too want to move my ripped .MKV's back into .ISO's and burn backup
copies of some movie-DVDs, and the info here sounds like the ticket.
I noticed one reply, which was explaining the issue of single-layer vs dual-layer
blank DVDs. I'd heard of this, but needed a 'refresher course', so I googled on
Wikipedia and found this article, which explains details of 'DL' (dual-layer).
Hope this article is helpful to others:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DVD#Dual-layer_recording
[The URL above points into the relevant section to info about dual-layer.
The fuller article covers almost anything you'd want/need to know about
DVD media types, etc.]
That said, my goal will be to try to produce .ISO files that will fit on single-layer
media, as I suspect that using dual-layer might be more trouble than its worth,
so I'd like to avoid that whenever possible.
[Tried tsMuxR, but then learned that it seems to be BlueRay only!? e.g. the output
'STREAM' always seemed to be .m2ts file, which is not what I wanted...too large to
fit on 4.7GB. The webpage and docs are in Russian...they of course can be translated
but I haven't bothered to do that yet. Plus, I don't own BlueRay player (yet) either.]
Next I installed the FreeMake video converter mentioned in an earlier reply...
I then selected for input a .MKV file, then
chose 'DVD' icon, and the sub-option 'Create an .ISO (file-container)'. Nice.
[This software overall is IMPRESSIVE...looks simple to use, and nicely presented!]
Yes, as someone else mentions, it DOES have a much longer run time
(about 35 mins for a movie .MKV, on my quite-fast i7-CPU-ed laptop w/4.0-GB of ram),
but I rationalize that with fact that it chose to re-compress, which normally takes
3-5 times longer than de-compressing...so be patient. The resulting .ISO for
the chapters of a movie was reduced to about 1.6-GB, so it's easy to conclude that
indeed, it clearly was re-compressing. So far, this 'FreeMake' converter software looks
impressive...the install felt right, and the first output seems reasonable looking.
[I haven't yet burned the .ISO onto physical DVD-media, but will do that soon
and report back whether that newly burned DVD will play ok on my DVD-player.
In theory, it OUGHT to. (Update: Yep, it does, w/ one minor glitch...can't
select to enable any sub-titles...it keeps saying "Operation can't be performed
during playback, stop playback first".
This problem seems to be a menu-design glitch, from choosing
a 'motion-menu', using FreeMake v3.0.2. I burned a 2nd one, using
'text-menu' choice the next time, but it has the same issue.]
I've used their support-email system to seek advice on this problem, and
am waiting to hear back.
(It's not really a showstopper...I can view the movie fine, just not
with sub-titles.)
Cheers...
H.264 codec and Veetle.com are very cool.
[And, so is MKV container-format.]
[And, so is MKV container-format.]
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- Joined: Sun Jul 08, 2012 2:26 am
Re: MKV back to DVD or Blu Ray
Below are a few MAC OSX programs that will do MKV to DVD:
VisualHub - it still ROCKS!!!
NOTE: Go under DVD tab advanced setting and set ffmpeg flags for video and audio passthrough...also select Author as DVD under the DVD tab (3-5min).
Permute
NOTE: Just drag and drop the MKV (5-7min).
iFFmpeg
NOTE: Just drag and drop MKV with setting to VOB Container...then go under settings/options to select audio/video passthrough and under advanced tab select Create DVD.iso...also make sure you select NTSC or PAL under the options tab (around 7min).
Toast 11
NOTE: Much slower due to Toast only allowing video passthrough and forcing audio encoding (around 30min).
BONUS: Hybrid - (http://www.selur.de/) appears to do both MKV to DVD and MKV to Blu-ray.
VisualHub - it still ROCKS!!!
NOTE: Go under DVD tab advanced setting and set ffmpeg flags for video and audio passthrough...also select Author as DVD under the DVD tab (3-5min).
Permute
NOTE: Just drag and drop the MKV (5-7min).
iFFmpeg
NOTE: Just drag and drop MKV with setting to VOB Container...then go under settings/options to select audio/video passthrough and under advanced tab select Create DVD.iso...also make sure you select NTSC or PAL under the options tab (around 7min).
Toast 11
NOTE: Much slower due to Toast only allowing video passthrough and forcing audio encoding (around 30min).
BONUS: Hybrid - (http://www.selur.de/) appears to do both MKV to DVD and MKV to Blu-ray.