setarip_old wrote:@Bitwize
I personally am not "set" on anything regarding the situation you've described (It was another member who said, "MakeMKV is not designed to alter the streams in any way. It is designed to give you bit-for-bit perfect copies of your audio and video streams in an MKV container."). I just wanted to make certain that you saw the same information regarding this topic that I saw posted - and that it might help you. You'd be surprised (maybe not) at how many posts are made saying, in essence, "Oh, I didn't know that!"
Actually, based on what I've seen since the inception of this delightful program, my own sense is that "Mike" is amenable to anything that is sensible (such as your suggestion) that can be simply implemented (also, such as your suggestion) - although it initially took considerable arm twisting and begging to convince him to support my favorite orphan (HD-DVDs) ;>}
BTW - Have you tried playing one of these problematic files under an ordinary PC software player, such as "Splash Lite" or "VLC", to see if it exhibits the same behavior?
Also, since you mention that you have no such problem with playing Blu-ray VC-1s, which as far as I know, are all 1080p, are you sure that none of the difficulty you've encountered is due to the fact that virtually ALL HD-DVDs with VC-1 are 1080i?
Thank you for the kind and thorough reply
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
Glad to hear my suggestion is still under consideration.
I too am a big fan of the HD-DVD format and only wish to have a more universally compatible backup option. In order for that to happen, the pulldown flags should be removed from the VC-1 video track of an HD-DVD. Removing the flags does no re-encoding of the video track and in no way alters the quality of the track.
I have no trouble with 1080i file playback per se; but without the removal of the pulldown flags, an HD-DVD MKV is interpreted as 29.97fps instead of 23.976fps. Yes, I realize that most HD-DVD with VC-1 are 1080i, but they are also 23.976fps. The Popcorn Hour sees the HD-DVD MKV as 1080i/30 when in reality it is 1080i/24. This discrepancy results in playback issues. Removing the pulldown flags clears up the "confusion." I'm certain that other hardware players struggle with this as well. It is in no way isolated to the Popcorn Hour.
Adding a pulldown flag removal option for VC-1 HD-DVD is in the best interest of anyone looking for a long-term archiving option. Thank you again for the proactive dialogue on this subject!