That being said, depending on the quality of the stabilization software, it may make the video look worse anyways, as it needs to rotate and scale frames.Ī lot of people film and edit at a higher resolution and bitrate then the intended end result to achieve a higher quality. You might be able to do this if Mercalli V4 has a plugin. Ideally, you would only have to export when all the editing is done so the video doesn't go through compression twice. If you need to export video while you edit, you should do so at high bitrate (higher then captured at is okay) to avoid quality loss before your final video. That is 8000 kilobytes per second (not kilobits, which would be 64000).
#XVID4PSP MAKE INPUT AND OUTPUT BITRATE THE SAME 1080P#
Meaning the actual quality of the footage after stabilizing isn't the same as before no matter what bitrate or codec.įor your final result, YouTube has some recommended bit rates you can find online: įor 1080p at 30fps, they recommend 8Mbps. Lower if final quality isn't that important.Īlso remember that digitally stabilized footage is cropped and then upscaled back to 1080. Then at maybe 10Mbit/s for YouTube 1080p 25fps. Use an intermediate codec like ProRes, DNxHD or Cineform. If your video goes through several export steps, then h264 isn't really the codec for the job. that's when further bitrate increases at 1080p start to become visually indistinguishable from ProRes. The higher the better, up to a max limit of maybe 100Mbit/s. Record 35Mbit/s or higher if possible though.
![xvid4psp make input and output bitrate the same xvid4psp make input and output bitrate the same](https://10671595.s21i.faiusr.com/4/ABUIABAEGAAg87G8_AUo7vOYpQUwhAc40AY.png)
the output you are getting is either the recommended output bitrate according to the software or just a setting that you forgot to change.
![xvid4psp make input and output bitrate the same xvid4psp make input and output bitrate the same](https://www.viastreaming.com/images/shoutcast/16.png)
You can record at 2mbit/s and output at 20000mbit/s. Bitrate is just a function in the software, and doesn't correlate to quality.