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How
to rip a DVD to miniDVD using DVD Shrink
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A lot of people are making VCD/SVCD/DIVX
movies because they fit onto smaller media. In my opinion this
is very senseless for a few of reasons.
Processing time: It can take up to 3 hours to convert a complete
DVD title into a VCD, even longer for the better formats. High
quality Tmpeg conversions can take 12 hours!
Quality: Unless you use SVCD or higher resolution mpegs, the
picture quality is horrible.
Size: A VCD takes approximately 2 CDR's. SVCD takes up to 4
CDR's. DivX can vary.
Compatibility: Many tabletop players will not accept SVCD or
DivX. Few will accept non-standard VCD.
I'm going to show you another easy method of breaking down a
DVD into two CDR's, while preserving high quality, compatibility,
and saving time! I'm going to show you this process with pretty
pictures so you don't get lost. We're also going to do this
with one easy-to-use FREEWARE program! You will need the following:
DVD Shrink. It's freeware, it's awesome, and it has everything
we need built right into it. With a few tricks we can decrypt,
split, and compress a single DVD into two CDR's, within about
2 hours! Download DVD Shrink here.
First let's take a look at the facts. The best quality you're
going to get is with a standard DVD. The best compatibility
you're going to get is with a DVD. So why, oh why would you
want to use anything else? We will be compressing the movie
so some quality will be lost, but for the love of god, believe
me when I say it will be no worse than SVCD can offer. I have
used VCD/SVCD and I have given up on them after a great deal
of good and bad experiences. Don't waste your time, just read
on.... |


Put the DVD disc into the drive and load up DVD Shrink, give
it a few moments for the computer to recognize the disc.
Hit the OPEN DISK button. |

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A window will popup and request the drive where
the DVD resides. It should look like this.3) When you select
the drive and hit OK, the disc will be analyzed. This will take
a couple of minutes. If the ENABLE PREVIEW is checked, you will
see a fast forwarded preview of the movie. |


Label 2 shows the video stream. DVD Shrink version 3 has an
automatic compression feature. It will automatically set the
compression to the level needed to fit the entire DVD onto a
blank. If you were to check the RATIO option, you can manually
slide the compression level back and forth by dragging your
mouse over the slide bar that will appear. Still pictures are
something you will never want.
Label 3 shows the audio streams for the main movie. It shows
various languages and sound types. Only one of them is required
and we will go into more detail about that later.
Label 4 shows the subtitles available for the movie. They are
small and you may leave them all if you wish but I normally
deselect them all.
Label 5 shows a preview of the structure highlighted. If you
select the main movie, it will start playing the main movie.
If you select the menus they will be previewed. Note that there
is no sound. This is normal. The preview window is a video preview
only. Don¡¯t be alarmed when you hear no sound.
We need to rip this DVD but only the main movie. To do this
we must use RE-AUTHOR mode.Click the Re-auhor button you can
see in DVD Shrink's toolbar right at the top.
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After the analyzing is
complete, the main window will display the following.
I¡¯ve labeled the screen capture. The DVD Structure
window is labeled as 1. This area shows the contents of the
DVD. We see the menus, main movie and extras. The contents will
vary for each DVD but will all be similar. On the left you see
the STREAMS window marked 2, 3, & 4. It contains the video,
audio and subtitle streams for each item in the DVD structure.
If you highlight a different structure item, the streams will
change, showing only the streams for that item. We are only
concerned with the main movie. Highlight it and notice the streams
window. |


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If you click RE-AUTHOR at the top
a new instance of DVD Shrink will open. Now highlight the main
movie and hit the plus (+) next to it. It will expand showing
you the actual main movie and size. It looks something like
this.We are going to drag this highlighted part from this instance
of DVD Shrink into the empty DVD Structure of the other. Adjust
windows on the desktop to accomplish this. |


As you adjust everything the green bar at the top will movie.
This bar indicates how much space is required to make this DVD.
By default it is set to fit on a blank DVD. A blank DVD is NOT
4.7 gig, it¡¯s actually smaller.
You can select any customizable size from the EDIT/PREFENCES
menu at the top.
If you see red on the bar, it¡¯s too big. You will
also be notified of this fact when you try to backup. You shouldn¡¯t
see this though because the maximum compression ratio will get
the size below a standard DVD 99.99% of the time. I our example
we see 1897MB. This is good.
We will now back this up to the hard drive. Click BACKUP at
the top. You should see the next window popup. |
Now we work in the new window. We now need to remove
some of the unwanted stuff from this new DVD and compress it
to maximum.
- Select RATIO in the video stream. A slide bar now appears.
Slight the blue all the way to the left as far as you can. The
ratio percentage will decrease as you do.
- Uncheck all of the audio streams except for the one which
matches your language. Normally there are 6-channel and 2-channel
sound formats. Chose which of them you want.
- Uncheck the subtitles if you wish. If you don¡¯t
keep audio of a language, then do not keep the subtitles for
that language either. Personally, I don¡¯t keep anything.
Notice how my settings are adjusted in this display. |

There is the possibility of an error here. If you get a cyclic
redundancy error during this process it may be caused by a few
things. First the disc may be scratched or dirty, clean it.
Next try another DVD reader because not all drives are equal
and some have problems with certain discs. Finally if you cannot
get it to work, you must rip the DVD to the hard drive using
a freeware program called DVD Decrypter. It has the ability
to fast skip over errors. Return to DVD Shrink after you rip
it to the hard drive. If all else fails, get another disc. You
can download DVD Decrypter here and read a guide here. |
Enter the directory where you will be placing the
files. Make sure you have enough room on your hard drive.
If region free is not selected, check it.
The Deep Analysis is a feature that performs a check on each
frame of video instead of at intervals. This promotes quality.
I normally do not use this on the first pass. I will however
use this on any addition compression passes because the compression
will get heavier and effect quality. The time required to
rip this DVD will increase significantly if you do a deep
analysis. I recommend you do not use this on the first pass.
Leave provider ID as it is.
Hit the OK when ready.
DVD Shrink will now rip the movie. The time that it will take
depends on the computer and drive speed of your system. I¡¯ve
noticed that it does get faster as it moves through the process.
The time will be adjusted as it goes.
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Once the ripping is complete all of the DVD files should now
be in the folder you selected. They will be completely decrypted
and compressed to fit a standard blank DVD-R.
The main DVD Shrink program should still be running, if not,
re-run it. We are now going to select OPEN FILES at the top.
Find the directory where you ripped the DVD to and select the
VIDEO_TS.IFO file. Click OK. The files will be analyzed and
loaded in DVD Shrink.
This time we will repeat the compression. Select RATIO and
slide it all the way to the left until total size is 1400MB
or less. In this example, we do not get it under 1400MB. That¡¯s
okay. It¡¯s close enough so that when we split
the movie into two parts, we can compress each part and each
should get under 700MB.
This will allow us to fit it onto a CDR. In the following
display we can get it to 1501MB. That means after we compress
this, it will be close enough to start splitting. If it was
much larger, we would either re-compress again or decide to
split this into 3 CDR¡¯s. 3 CDR¡¯s would
require us to be under 2100MB. In which case we would stop
here and skip to the splitting part. I hope you¡¯re
catching on.
We are going to hit BACKUP again and dump these files into
a different folder. We want to keep the entire folder separate
so we can take a step back if something goes wrong or if we
decide to use more than two CDR¡¯s. I suggest you
use DEEP ANALYSIS this time and every time you compress it
after the first.
Again we let it recompress and go through the process. Deep
analysis will cause it to take longer but it¡¯s
really needed now. Hit OK and the software will start ripping.
You should not get any errors now that all the data is being
read from the hard drive.
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Now that the rip is complete again, let¡¯s
re-open those files using the OPEN FILES button again.
To split the movie we have to use the RE-AUTHOR mode again.
Click RE-AUTHOR and drag the main movie into the new DVD Shrink
instance. You¡¯ll notice that the START/END button
is now available, as the display at your left shows.
1Click the START/END button and you will see the following
window popup.
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Simply click the OK button to go back to the main window to
verify the sizes of each part is below 700MB. Adjust the compression
ratios to match for each half. It¡¯s important to
make sure that the compression ratios are about the same for
each half or there will be a noticeable quality difference between
the two halves. Keep going back and forth to check until you¡¯re
satisfied that you have the right settings. Write them down
on a sheet of paper if you need to.
Once you have everything decided, go back to the START/END window
and setup the first half.
Then click the BACKUP button and write each half to its own
folder. I¡¯ve used DEEP ANALYSIS again.
After it is done, follow the same proccess for the second
part.
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This allows you to cut the movie by setting a start
and end point. The compression and ripping will ONLY occur on
the part designated. The trick here is to find the absolute
middle of the movie and make sure that both parts are under
700MB each. I normally start at chapter one of course and then
end at the middle chapter. Usually this will be right about
the middle but in some cases it will not.
The other method is to use the slide bars and write down where
the first half ended so that you know where the second half
will begin. Also consider cutting the movie before the ending
credits to save room. The two preview windows will show you
where you are in the movie.
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After I have created each part, I will go on to burning the
miniDVD¡¯s. I use Nero Ultra Edition 6. Simply
select miniDVD and the VIDEO_TS and AUDIO_TS folders will
be created automatically. Dump all of the files into the VIDEO_TS
folder, NOT the root directory! Of course each half on its
own disc. Follow the instructions for your burning software.
IMPORTANT NOTES
Some DVD players, especially older ones, have a problem decoding
these movies. I¡¯m not sure why but I¡¯m
assuming it¡¯s the level of compression. You should
burn the discs at a maximum speed of 8X to be absolutely safe.
Also use DISC-AT-ONCE mode.
If your player is 5 years old and it has a problem with these,
there¡¯s not much else I can say but to buy a new
DVD player. I have a cheap Apex 1200. They don¡¯t
last long but they¡¯re under $40 a piece and play
almost anything I put it them. Buying a $200 player is foolish
unless you¡¯re positive that it¡¯s good
quality and compatible with various video formats.
Is it worth it?
These are DVD compatible discs that you have made. They should
be compatible with any modern DVD player. Also the quality
will be better than an SVCD as long as you did not compress
it 10 times. There are three reasons why I claim that these
are better. First DVD format uses a VBR or variable bit rate
for video. SVCD uses a CBR or constant bit rate. The rate
on a DVD is as high as 9800 kbps. A standard SVCD is below
2600 kbps. Also the resolution for a DVD is approximately
720x480, where as a standard SVCD is 480x480. More resolution
means you get a better picture as long as the video rate is
high enough. Last but not least, I¡¯ve tested these
and compared them. My method has produced movies that are
nearly DVD quality. When I¡¯ve compared them to
SVCD¡¯s of the same movie, the SVCD loses every
time.
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