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#1 | |
Special Member
Feb 2006
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Lionsgate Goes BD-50 with 'Descent'
http://bluray.highdefdigest.com/news...th_Descent/289 Quote:
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#2 |
Blu-ray Knight
Jan 2006
www.blurayoasis.com
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Not even a full two months ago, I couldn't escape the FUD and trolling of "BD50 is VAPORWARE!!!"
Kind of funny how "vaporware" is starting to show up all over the place, even before Christmas, isn't it? It's becoming a mantra, but here we go again: "Another nail in the coffin of HD-DVD." |
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#4 |
Active Member
Sep 2006
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What will be different with a disc that is bd-50 like Click will be when it is released tomorrow? Does it mean that the disc will be able to hold more information?
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#5 |
Active Member
Sep 2006
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#6 |
Active Member
Sep 2006
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Could a bd-50 disc hold a 6 hour movie? or what is the length in hours?
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#7 |
Blu-ray Guru
May 2006
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hard to state things as just hours. it depends really on bitrates and compression
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#8 | |
Senior Member
Sep 2005
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The most recent VC-1 or AVC based movies of any quality are running at over 20 Mbps for the combination of both video and sound for the feature film itself for 1080p recordings. (In another post I'd done the math on a few back a month or so ago and got an average of 22 Mbps.) If we assume the round number of 20 Mbps then that's roughly 9 GB per hour. At 50 GB that's approximately 5.5 hours. However, as said above it is extremely dependent upon bitrates -- which is directly dependent upon quality (both video and audio) desired and the original media you are trying to display. |
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#9 |
Active Member
Jul 2006
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Lionsgate really need to do something, their Blue Rays are the worst quality of all the studios, 50GB of MPEG2(We presume) could really fix that up.
Good oh. Is the movie any good? |
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#10 |
Active Member
Aug 2006
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Don't forget that the bitrates for the video are most likely variable, meaning that they don't waste bits on scenes without too much motion. That'll allow them to fit longer movies too.
Anyway, this disk sounds pretty good. 50gb BD for a 99 min movie? Either there's a ton of extras, or the bitrate is gonna be maxed out. Though I suppose that interactive commentary probably'll take up quite a bit of the space, since that's in HD too. |
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#11 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I did the calculations for LOTR:ROTK EE using AVC 12.6Mbps and TrueHD 6.1 24/48. The four-hour movie alone is 33GB.
fuad |
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#12 | |
Power Member
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So a BD-50 would be perfect for it, you could even increase the bitrate. How I would love LOTR:Trilogy, The Matrix Trilogy, and Star Wars Trilogy (original) on BD. |
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#14 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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TrueHD 6.1
LOTR FOTR 208 mins x 60 secs = 12,480 secs Sound in TrueHD (24bit/48kHz at 6.1) - 12480 x 4.025 Mbps Average bitrate / 8 bits = 6.28 GB LOTR TT 214 mins x 60 secs = 12,840 secs Sound in TrueHD (24bit/48kHz at 6.1) - 12840 x 4.025 Mbps Average bitrate / 8 bits = 6.46 GB LOTR ROTK 250 mins x 60 secs = 15000 secs Sound in TrueHD (24bit/48kHz at 6.1) - 15000 x 4.025 Mbps Average bitrate / 8 bits = 7.55 GB TrueHD 7.1 LOTR FOTR 208 mins x 60 secs = 12,480 secs Sound in TrueHD (24bit/48kHz at 7.1) - 12480 x 4.7 Mbps Average bitrate / 8 bits = 7.33 GB LOTR TT 214 mins x 60 secs = 12,840 secs Sound in TrueHD (24bit/48kHz at 7.1) - 12840 x 4.7 Mbps Average bitrate / 8 bits = 7.54 GB LOTR ROTK 250 mins x 60 secs = 15000 secs Sound in TrueHD (24bit/48kHz at 7.1) - 15000 x 4.7 Mbps Average bitrate / 8 bits = 8.81 GB Video at 14 Mbps LOTR FOTR 208 mins x 60 secs = 12480 secs Video in VC-1 14 Mbps (average) - 12480 x 14 Mbps Average bitrate / 8 bits = 21.84 GB LOTR TT 214 mins x 60 secs = 12840 secs Video in VC-1 14 Mbps (average) - 12840 x 14 Mbps Average bitrate / 8 bits = 22.47 GB LOTR ROTK 250 mins x 60 secs = 15000 Video in VC-1 14 Mbps (average) - 15000 x 14 Mbps Average bitrate / 8 bits = 26.25 GB Audio + Video LOTR FOTR (video at 21.84 GB) using TrueHD 6.1 = 21.84 + 6.28 = 28.12 GB using TrueHD 7.1 = 21.84 + 7.33 = 29.17 GB LOTR TT(video at 22.47 GB) using TrueHD 6.1 = 22.47 + 6.46 = 28.93 GB Using TrueHD 7.1 = 22.47 + 7.54 = 30.01 GB LOTR ROTK (video at 26.25 GB) using TrueHD 6.1 = 26.25 + 7.55 = 33.8 GB Using TrueHD 7.1 = 26.25 + 8.81 = 35.06 GB For the LOTR EE, ROTK is the killer for HD-DVD. fuad Last edited by GoldenRedux; 11-24-2006 at 02:10 PM. Reason: fixed formating. :) |
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#15 | |
Power Member
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#18 | |
Blu-ray Knight
Jan 2006
www.blurayoasis.com
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Black and white math and pesky facts like these can't lie, folks. ![]() |
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#19 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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If the folks at Microsoft can get the average video rate to go below 12.6Mbps (and not just at 12.6Mpbs), then LOTR EE might just be do-able. Of course, if they do high bitrate DD+ 6.1 then it's certainly doable.
DTS HDMA uses more space than TrueHD but it saves space in terms of providing direct support for legacy DTS systems (1.5Mbps DTS that DVDs can handle right now). Using TrueHD on HD-DVD for lossless is the best option for that side of the camp, while HDMA is doable for BD. Either way, both audio codecs are lossless. Of course, all of the figures above are just on the movies. No commentary tracks that was on the DVD plus the menu systems. Hopefully when LOTR gets released, they'll give you the option of watching the EE version with or without the intermission (like the limited edition DVD could do). fuad |
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#20 | |
Site Manager
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http://www.ebu.ch/en/technical/trev/trev_home.html If 37.5 mbs mpeg-2 is very close to D5 master quality, and EBU said AVC was twice as efficient, you need about 14 mbs AVC for LOR (18.75 mbs x 0.75), like WriteSimply used. I myself would feel more at ease with at least 20 mbs (about a dB and a half more) since I sit close to a movie screen! So I made my own Superbit version of WriteSimply's table ![]() TrueHD 6.1 Superbit ![]() FOTR 208 mins x 60 secs = 12,480 secs Sound in TrueHD (24/48 in 6.1) - 12480 x 4.025 mbs = 6.3 gB Video in AVC @ 20 mbs x 12,480 = 31.2 gB Total film: 37.5 gB TT 214 mins x 60 secs = 12,840 secs Sound in TrueHD (24/48 in 6.1) - 12840 x 4.025 mbs = 6.5 gB Video in AVC @ 20 mbs x 12,840 = 32.1 gB Total film: 38.6 gB ROTK 250 mins x 60 secs = 15000 secs Sound in TrueHD (24/48 in 6.1) - 15000 x 4.025 mbs = 7.6 gB Video in AVC @ 20 mbs x 15,000 = 37.5 gB Total film: 45.1 gB Kinda like Beethoven's 9th for CD Oh , I forgot, we're actually talking about Descent in BD-50! ![]() D 99 mins x 60 secs = 5,940 secs Sound in LPCM (24/48 in 5.1?) - 5,940 x 5.9 mbs = 4.4 gB Video in MPEG-2 @ 37.5 mbs x 5,940 = 27.8 gB Total film: 32.2 gB Last edited by Deciazulado; 10-11-2006 at 06:12 AM. Reason: We can't forget the Lionsgate goodie |
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thread | Forum | Thread Starter | Replies | Last Post |
Lionsgate announces The Descent | Blu-ray Movies - North America | Jeff® | 48 | 11-21-2024 01:46 AM |
Descent | Blu-ray Movies - North America | ScoBro828 | 4 | 09-23-2007 01:03 AM |
Descent Problems help please. | Blu-ray Movies - North America | BluFive | 6 | 03-13-2007 06:53 AM |
The Descent and The Covenant | Blu-ray Movies - North America | BallsHD | 13 | 02-24-2007 08:43 PM |
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