![]() ![]() I knew something was drastically wrong and Resolve Delivery was underperforming when even the stock windows movie editor (sometimes used for casual instant videos) exports files at a total bitrate of 16000 some kbps if you choose its default highest quality setting. The file size increased by a whopping 2 GB over the default "Best" but at least it wasn't a massive file. Welcome In today's video we look at how exactly we get videos from resolve 17 into a watchable, sharable, havable format It's all about exporting videoLoo. When you adjust the bitrate restriction (I set the limit to 18000 kbps) it improves the image quality and clarity exponentially. (I have some clients who are only able to use mp4 format for their social media uploads and. If it's not possible in Resolve 15, then what's the best workflow to convert it into MP4 Thanking you in advance. The automatic quality setting of "Best" only defaults to a bitrate of around 9000 some kbps for MP4 H.265 and topping out around 11000 some kbps for MOV H.265. If I upgrade to Resolve 15 will I be able to export mp4 videos 2. Try putting the Keyframes back to auto, and if you must restrict the bitrate make it something like 15000kbps, otherwise use the Automatic setting on Best. You should at least render at the original bitrate of the footage. haha.Ĭharles Bennett wrote:I'm not surprised you are seeing pixelation and blockiness with it restricted to that low bitrate. ![]() My verdict: Resolve's encoder is the fault. This is frustrating after taking a risk and doing a professional project in Resolve. I will allow for the possibility that I am just not setting something right in my encoder settings in Resolve but 90% confident it's just the fact that under the free version the encoder is not stellar. I took an uncompressed QT render from Resolve into Adobe Media Encoder and output an MP4 at a CBR of 20 Mbps and all my problems went away. (Times passes) aaaannndd sorta answered my own question. I would fault the POND5 footage (where applicable) but during timeline playback in Resolve these fades (of course being performed in real time) look great and have no such issues. I think Resolve's encoder (at least on the free version) just isn't' nearly as good as Premiere's. I've tried Quality: Automatic: Best and also restricting the bitrate 30,000 Kb/s just to be generous but the results are the same. it looks like the data rate isn't enough (blocks in the details) like the bitrate is down below 8,000 (in Premiere or Media Encoder). Most of it looks good when playing back a render in an external player but during fades up or down to black (high rates of change between frames) on the Ponds 5 stuff I get noticeable compression distortion. I've got footage sourced from a Sony A7 III shot in UHD mixed with some stock shots from POND5 on a 1080p timeline and 1080p output. Using the free version and I'm having the same issue.
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