User Manual

Chapter 5 Custom settings and output formats 72
Use the Frame Rate pop-up menu to choose from the following options:
23.98: Used for NTSC-based video
25: Used for PAL-based video
29.97: Used for NTSC-based video
50: Used for PAL-based video
59.94: Used for NTSC-based video
Average Bit Rate: Use the slider to choose an average bit rate to use for the output video,
or enter a value in the eld. Although the available range for a Blu-ray disc is between 5
Mbps and 30 Mbps, typical video bit rates with H.264 might range from 7 Mbps to 15 Mbps,
depending on your DVD bit budget and the nature of your source media les. The available
range for AVCHD discs is 5 Mbps to 15 Mbps.
Maximum Bit Rate: Choose a maximum bit rate between 6 Mbps and 35 Mbps for a Blu-ray
disc, or between 6 Mbps and 17 Mbps for an AVCHD disc. You can also enter any number
within these ranges in the accompanying eld. The Maximum Bit Rate setting cannot be
lower than the Average Bit Rate setting. As a general rule, set your maximum bit rate at least 1
Mbps higher than your average bit rate, to allow for bit rate variability in achieving the goal of
constant quality.
Multi-pass: Select this checkbox to turn on multi-pass encoding. Similar to two-pass MPEG-2
encoding, multi-pass oers the best possible quality. For faster (single-pass) encodes, turn this
feature o by deselecting the checkbox. For more information, see Job segmenting and two-
pass or multi-pass encoding on page 249.
4 Click Save As.
Dolby Digital Professional les
Dolby Digital overview
Compressor provides the tools you need to encode and batch-encode Dolby Digital Professional
(AC-3) audio les.
Dolby Digital Professional format (also known as AC-3) is a very common compressed audio
format for DVD-Video discs. Compressor accepts multichannel sound les in a variety of formats
and gives you complete control over the AC-3 encoding process. Dolby Digital programs can
deliver 5.1-channel surround sound with ve discrete full-range channels (left, center, right, left
surround, and right surround) plus a sixth channel for low-frequency eects (LFE), sometimes
known as the subwoofer.” Another surround option is Dolby Surround, with four channels
(left, center, right, and surround). But not all AC-3 audio is 5.1 surround sound. Dolby Digital
Professional is commonly used to encode stereo les to greatly reduce their le size.