ChAoS Overlord
6th April 2002, 10:26
First of all, I'd like to thank doom9 for writing a decomb guide, it's what I really wanted to see on the site!
Still something is not clear to me, doom9 states the following
Telecide recovers progressive frames by field matching and by default it will post process every frame and deinterlace parts of a frame where combing (interlacing) effects can still be found.
FieldDeinterlace contains the postprocessing functionality of Telecide and should only be used on purely interlaced streams that have not been telecined. Most DVDs have been telecined in some way and are based on progressive sources so you shouldn't use this option on such clips. Truly interlaced clips are stuff you capture with your camera, and TV shows originally shot for TV (modern TV series are now often shot on film - 24fps progressive rather than 29.97 or 25fps interlaced).
Decimate well remove duplicate frames after postprocessing and adjust the framerate accordingly. If you have an interlaced or telecined PAL source this parameter is useless as you want to keep the original framerate.
I really want to do this right, but what I don't get is how I can figure out if the movie is a purely interlaced stream (FieldDeinterlacing) or the other things, how can I figure out/with which program which of these three options I should use, because it really isn't clear to silly old me :(
Thx in advance for sharing your insights with me guys
Still something is not clear to me, doom9 states the following
Telecide recovers progressive frames by field matching and by default it will post process every frame and deinterlace parts of a frame where combing (interlacing) effects can still be found.
FieldDeinterlace contains the postprocessing functionality of Telecide and should only be used on purely interlaced streams that have not been telecined. Most DVDs have been telecined in some way and are based on progressive sources so you shouldn't use this option on such clips. Truly interlaced clips are stuff you capture with your camera, and TV shows originally shot for TV (modern TV series are now often shot on film - 24fps progressive rather than 29.97 or 25fps interlaced).
Decimate well remove duplicate frames after postprocessing and adjust the framerate accordingly. If you have an interlaced or telecined PAL source this parameter is useless as you want to keep the original framerate.
I really want to do this right, but what I don't get is how I can figure out if the movie is a purely interlaced stream (FieldDeinterlacing) or the other things, how can I figure out/with which program which of these three options I should use, because it really isn't clear to silly old me :(
Thx in advance for sharing your insights with me guys