Interstellar.2014_sized_1920x1080_BluRay_Remuxed_Enhanced_Edit_AVC_DTS_5.1 6 CH 24 bit-kAyOs).mkvseeders: 0
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Interstellar.2014_sized_1920x1080_BluRay_Remuxed_Enhanced_Edit_AVC_DTS_5.1 6 CH 24 bit-kAyOs).mkv (Size: 14.65 GB)
DescriptionInterstellar.2014.1920x1080.BluRay.REMUX.AVC_DTS_5.1 6 CH 24 bit-kAyOs)encode(1).mkv UPDATED:) I made a 2 GiG HEVC version the other day to be helpfull to the D/L limit impaired that got sound abused & size moaned. So here is the full size Black border Free with DTS_5.1 6 CH 24 bit audio.. This is the Remuxed 1920 x 1080 sized_kAyOs)_encode_DTS_5.1 6 CH 24 bit-audio. I resized the RARBG source with the Mixed aspect ratios of 1920 x 800 & 1920 x 1080 -to the larger aspect ratio : 16:9. then enhanced & remuxed the DTS 5.1 24 bit audio into a 14.6 GB (15,725,218,013 bytes) MKV with- NO mixed aspect ratio changes @ 1080p encode size 1920x1080 with No Black borders ;) Info: 1080p is defined as progressive scan video that has 1920 horizontal pixels. The vertical pixel count can be anything. When you download video in wider aspect ratios you get smaller vertical pixel counts while the horizontal count stays fixed at 1920. 1920x1080 (aspect ratio 16:9, aka 1.78:1) is a dead aspect ratio for theaters. Our TV's might be 16:9, but movie theaters havent been for a long time. Because movie studios dont like to see their work edited and have glorious detail removed, They print the BD's to the same screen format that it was filmed for. 1920x800 is 12:5, aka 2.40:1 - is known as HDTV widescreen Blu-ray/theatrical in "Full HD", which is the current standard for anamorphic widescreen theater films (~2.39:1) and Blu-ray. This is the smallest size I could encode & keep the video HD-(1920x1080) & DTS 5.1 6-CH_24 bit BluRay quality. Caps don`t do it justice just to show the res size & lack of borders :) right click view image to see nearly full size caps :) EnJoY & SEED ThnX :) INFO: Video ID : 1 Format : AVC Format/Info : Advanced Video Codec Format profile : Baseline@L4.0 Format settings, CABAC : No Format settings, ReFrames : 2 frames Codec ID : V_MPEG4/ISO/AVC Duration : 2h 49mn Width : 1 920 pixels Height : 1 080 pixels Display aspect ratio : 16:9 Frame rate mode : Constant Frame rate : 23.976 fps Standard : NTSC Color space : YUV Chroma subsampling : 4:2:0 Bit depth : 8 bits Scan type : Progressive Default : Yes Forced : No Color primaries : BT.601 NTSC Transfer characteristics : BT.601 Matrix coefficients : BT.601 Color range : Full Audio ID : 2 Format : DTS Format/Info : Digital Theater Systems Format profile : MA / Core Mode : 16 Format settings, Endianness : Big Codec ID : A_DTS Duration : 2h 49mn Bit rate mode : Variable Bit rate : Unknown / 1 509 Kbps Channel(s) : 6 channels Channel positions : Front: L C R, Side: L R, LFE Sampling rate : 48.0 KHz Bit depth : 24 bits Compression mode : Lossless / Lossy Title : Surround 5.1 Language : English Default : Yes Forced : No DURATION : 02:49:03.936000000 NUMBER_OF_FRAMES : 950994 NUMBER_OF_BYTES : 4682760972 _STATISTICS_WRITING_APP : mkvmerge v7.7.0 ('Six Voices') 64bit built on Feb 28 2015 23:39:33 _STATISTICS_WRITING_DATE_UTC : 2015-03-16 21:15:42 _STATISTICS_TAGS : BPS DURATION NUMBER_OF_FRAMES NUMBER_OF_BYTES Sharing WidgetTrailerAll Comments |
Now it is all 1920 x 1080 with NO blk borders & NO mixed aspect ratio change BluRay detail.
If the movie "had Mixed aspect ratios of 1920 x 800 with blk borders & 1920 x 1080 with no borders", as you wrote, and now it is entirely 1920x1080, there are only 2 possible explanations: or you have vertically stretched the 1920x800 parts of the movie (looks like this is the case, judging by the screencaps you posted), or you have cropped the same video parts on left and/or right side of the image.
In both cases, *there is* an aspect ratio change (the 2.39:1 images now are 1.85:1). Please, clarify.