A few minutes later you will have an mkv file containing the exact video and audio streams of your Blu-ray disc. Step 7įeel free to add the correct language to any other audio or subtitle tracks you may have and when you are ready Browse (1) to set the output filename and click Start muxing (2) in order to start the process. Here you need to add the FPS value exactly as the one you wrote down at Step 2. Select the video track (3), set the language (4) and then click the Format specific options (5) tab. Step 5įirst of all, we need to set as input all the files that tsMuxeR created, so click add (1) and select all the files that we demuxed before (2). Next step is to create our mkv file, so run mkvmerge GUI (named mmg.exe in the archive you have downloaded). When it is done, click OK and close tsMuxeR. This process will take from about 45 to 90 minutes, depending on the speed of your Blu-ray drive and the size of the disc. TsMuxeR will now copy the tracks you have selected to your hard drive. Then set output to Demux (3) and after you set the location of the output files, click Start demuxing (4). Select the main video track, the audio that you want to keep and any subtitles (2) you may need later on. Now we have our main movie loaded and ready for extraction. tsMuxeR will automatically load all the m2ts files assosiated with it. To start, add (1) the playlist file that we have already found in BDInfo. Now, leave BDInfo open and run tsMuxeR Step 3 Make sure that in the various video and audio streams area (4) you right down the fps value of the video, in this example 23.976. In normal Blu-rays you will only have one big playlist and one m2ts file. That is why we have one bigger playlist, and another one a bit smaller. In this example, our Blu-ray uses seamless branching, in plain words it has a "Director's Cut" feature and it uses various smaller m2ts files (3) you can see in the list below. Check out which playlist contains the movie (2), obviously the one with the biggest length and check its name. Browse (1) and select the BDMV folder in your Blu-ray disc. Using this application we will determine in which files the main movie is and what streams we need. It will do all its work on the background. You can download it here or check the authors page here. I really suggest you let AnyDVD HD do that job. Still not sure why the chapters lose sync, however.ĮDIT 2: Additionally, the file is actually 2:28:58, not 2:28:49.Before you start processing your disc you need to use an unlocking software to circumvent the Blu-ray's protection. This is especially critical now as you typically can't just drive out to store and pick up the parts you may need.ĬHAPTER19NAME=Chapter 19 I'm not sure how to calculate fractions of seconds for 29.97fps video so I'm not sure if those agree with each other.ĮDIT: Actually, despite using colons in the first list that appears to be fractions of a second too, so.never mind. Over the decades I've been using PCs, I've learned to keep two of everything, I even have the parts to build a complete second i7 PC that I have to get around to, in addition to my laptop and dedicated video playing PC. I don't know about Australia, but I just saw some external DVD writers as low as $20 on Amazon. BTW, have you played your rip all the way through? There could be some errors that your decrypter didn't report. There's definitely something wrong with the disc or the reader you have since it's from 2007 and if it was a widespread issue, MakeMKV would have been updated to address it. The ripping part of MakeMKV, as you've experienced works very different from other programs, which BTW, you haven't said what you're using for straight rips. I highly recommend having a spare drive for test purposes. Part of troubleshooting is being able to test and eliminate possibilities. Good luck and let us know if it works for you! I did a test and it worked (AFAIK) perfectly. *MKVToolNix won't accept the demuxed chapter and. mkv and audio with MKVToolNix.* There's a potential for an audio sync issue which you'll have to fix by adding or removing a delay with Audacity. Choose the audio only since you have everything else in the. Demux the DVD (.ifo) with PgcDemux, by adding the main movie ifo. Be sure to retain the chapters and subs.Ģ. ifo with MakeMKV, but exclude the audio track. I think you can convert AC3 with Audicity.ġ. If it does, you can try converting the audio into another format such as PCM or MPEG-1 Layer2. I find the issue interesting and found a possible workaround, though again it may balk at the deformed audio track. The issue is that according to the MakeMKV forum link above, the issue is the audio track is malformed and if MakeMKV balks at that, so may DVDFab. Haven't used DVDFab in years (use AnyDVD on the rare occasion I need to), but according to the site, it can remux to.
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