Sorry if I'm not reading this right, But your comparing CloneBD to MakeMKV which those programs are different so I can't see how you can compare one to the other. ![]() It has settings that say the resulting MKV file should be an exact duplicate of the source - but this is not true. AnyDVD is great - I have no problem with it at all. AnyDVD is just as good as MakeMKV when your ripping to hard drive, When your using CloneBD your converting the movie which changes it which is a whole different procedure that is why it's different, Use MkeMKV or AnyDVD to rip to hard drive then if you want to convert use BD Rebuilder. Avoid CloneBD - it's pants (and expensive). The quality of the output from CloneBD was terrible - it converts everything to variable frame and compressed audio - even when you select the option to leave video and audio untouched. It's not.it's really not even a close competition. I tested CloneBD recently as the AnyDVD forum mods said it was much better than MakeMKV. That lead me to this VideoHelp forum: the one place that has always been there for me (and you!).Īny similar experiences out there? What am I missing? Comments? When I posted this hard data reply, I noticed that the SlySoft admins set me to "review this idiot first" mode, so I have yet to see my reply in their forums. Here are the video track differences when using each tool in "lossless" mode: These videos were playing simultaneously from the same position in the video track (my system can easily play multiple instances at full framerates, so don't point at me). That's absolutely hideous! The CloneBD instance can't even hit half the target framerate of 23.976. * the top MPC instance is playing the MKV generated by CloneBD, and the bottom is MakeMKV. Yikes! What a difference!Ĭheck out the performance difference, when playing back in MPC-HC 64-bit (v1.7.9) on a Core i7 with 6 cores 3.2 GHz, 32 GB, and dual nVIDIA GTX 680's: ![]() I conducted a test between the products: a lossless conversion of a Bluray title to MKV. Thx! So, how 'bout some hard data for ya then? ![]() I got a somewhat peevish reply from an admin with a link to their standard glossy page. If you wanted to test it out, you could use DVDFab HD Decrypter to create a raw DVD folder, with copy protection. You would gain nothing from feeding in a DVD source folder over an MKV remux of that same DVD. No encoding is involved so it is essentially a lossless process. So, I posted on SlySoft's CloneBD Forum on this, asking why CloneBD warrants so much more money for less functionality. MakeMKV remuxes (repackages) a DVD's files into a single continuous file. * BTW, I love AnyDVD and it definitely has its place, so let's not drag AnyDVD HD into this. $50 for MakeMKV, PLUS CloneBD can't handle DVDs (just BD)! Worse, it requires AnyDVD HD, while MakeMKV can decrypt on its own. I was just about to license MakeMKV, when I saw that SlySoft/Elaborate Bytes was offering CloneBD, which purported to do the same thing.
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