Export Video as AVI

Jamil-Taylor wrote on 2/27/2024, 11:45 PM

I have a video that is 1920x1080p with a 23.976 framerate. I exported this video using File|Export movie|Video as AVI... I did not change any default settings, and I set the file name to my D: drive with an AVI extension. The AVI video used the Intel IYUV codec, that has a perfect image quality. I have no complaints about the video quality.

My understanding is that AVI has undergone improvements via OpenDML that allow for larger file sizes. My question is how can I enable OpenDML AVI support in Video Pro X15 version 21.0.1.205? It looks like it is not being used, because my movie export resulted in two files being created. One being over 700GB, and a second one with a file name ending in _0001.avi that was about 200 or 300 GB in size.

Why did I export to AVI you may be wondering. I wanted to use DivX Pro to convert the video and reduce the size. I still used DivX Pro and simply added both files with the option to append as a single video. The two files being created was unexpected and curious. Is there an option I may have missed to enable OpenDML AVI support? My understanding was that OpenDML AVI was for supporting videos over 2GB. I also had an audio track that most likely pushed the size limit over 2GB resulting in two files being created.

 

Comments

AAProds wrote on 2/28/2024, 1:46 AM

@Jamil-Taylor

Magix Movie Studio (and I assume VPX) does export OpenDML AVIs. Open one of your files in Mediainfo and look at the Format Profile; it is "OpenDML". I'm no expert on OpenDML (I use compressed lossless codecs for my AVI work) but this post indicates OpenDML gets around a 4GB file size limit. That limit hasn't existed for years with modern OSs.

https://forum.videohelp.com/threads/392471-AVI-vs-OpenDML-for-archiving

Now why VPX is splitting your export I have no idea! 😂

I'd be doing a quality-comparison check between an MEPG 4 (H264) export straight out VPX verses the circuitous "Uncompressed AVI>DivXPro>DivX route".

Last changed by AAProds on 2/28/2024, 5:45 AM, changed a total of 2 times.

All my forum comments are based on or refer to my System 1.

My struggle is over! I built my (now) system 2 in 2011 when DV was king and MPEG 2 was just coming onto the scene and I needed a more powerful system to cope. Since then we've advanced to MP4 and to bigger and bigger resolutions. I was really suffering, not so much in editing (with proxies) but in encoding, which just took ages. A video, with Neat Video noise reduction applied, would encode at 12% of film speed. My new system 1 does the same job at 160% of film speed. Marvellous. I'm keeping my old system as a capture station for analogue video tapes and DV.

System 1

Windows 11 v23H2 severely modified by Openshell and ExplorerPatcher

Power supply: 850W Cooler Master (should have got modular)

CPU: Intel i7 13700K running at 3400mhz, cooled by a Kraken 2x140mm All In One liquid cooler.

RAM: 64gb (2x32gb sticks) G.Skill "Ripjaws" DDR4 3200Mhz

GPU 1: iGPU UHD 770

GPU 2: NVidia RTX 3060Ti Windforce 8gb

C drive: NVME 500gb

Various other SSD and HDDs.

Monitor: 27"/68cm Samsung, 2560 x 1440, 43 pixels/cm.

MEP 2021 version 20.0.1.80

Movie Studio 2023 version 22.0.3.172

Magix Video Easy version 7.0.1.145

System 2

(Still in use for TV and videotape capture)

Windows 10 v22H2

CPU: i5-750 at 2670mhz with 12gb RAM

Onboard IEEE1394 (Firewire) port

GPU: ATI Radeon HD 4770 (512mb) which is ignored by MEP

Hard drives: C Drive 256gb SSD, various other HDDs.

Monitor: Dell 22"/56cm, 1680x1050, 35 pixels/cm

MEP 2021 version 20.0.1.80

Movie Studio 2023 version 22.0.3.172

VPX 12

johnebaker wrote on 2/28/2024, 3:34 AM

@Jamil-Taylor

Hi

. . . .  D: drive . . . .

What is the D drive an internal second drive, USB external drive or a Memory card/stick, and is it formatted to FAT 32, exFAT, NTFS or a MAC filing system?

I also agree with @AAProds comment:

'I'd be doing a quality-comparison check between an MEPG 4 (H264) export straight out VPX verses the circuitous "Uncompressed AVI>DivXPro>DivX route".'

DivX does nothing that cannot be already done in VPX 15.

For smaller file sizes and no recompression export in VPX using either:

  • h.264 encoded video is the most universal format for playback and gives a good perceived (visual) quality for a moderate file size.
     
  • HEVC (h.265), which gives a better perceived quality than h.264 with a smaller file size, however encoding/export may take longer depending on your computer system specification - it requires considerably more processing power, and playback devices must support HEVC.
     

HTH

John EB
Forum Moderator

VPX 16, Movie Studio 2025, and earlier versions 2015 and 2016, Music Maker Premium 2024.

PC - running Windows 11 23H2 Professional on Intel i7-8700K 3.2 GHz, 16GB RAM, RTX 2060 6GB 192-bit GDDR6, 1 x 1Tb Sabrent NVME SSD (OS and programs), 2 x 4TB (Data) internal HDD + 1TB internal SSD (Work disc), + 6 ext backup HDDs.

Laptop - Lenovo Legion 5i Phantom - running Windows 11 23H2 on Intel Core i7-10750H, 16GB DDR4-SDRAM, 512GB SSD, 43.9 cm screen Full HD 1920 x 1080, Intel UHD 630 iGPU and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 (6GB GDDR6)

Sony FDR-AX53e Video camera, DJI Osmo Action 3 and Sony HDR-AS30V Sports cams.

Jamil-Taylor wrote on 2/28/2024, 5:14 AM

My machine has two SSD drives. One being a 4TB NVMe and a second being an 8TB SATA (that I had referred to as my D: drive).

For reasons unknown when I had output to AVI I ended up with two files initially. I will play around with this some more.

Thank you.

johnebaker wrote on 2/28/2024, 2:31 PM

@Jamil-Taylor

Hi

Thanks for the drive information.

I assume the drive is formatted with the NTFS file system, given that the exported files are 700 GB and 200 - 300 GB in size, ie the export is a total of between 900 - 1000 GB.

Why the file was split this way I do not know, there is no limitation coming from the drive file system.

Assuming you are running Windows 10 or 11 on a PC, not a MAC + Parallels + Windows, the video runtime, I calculate about 3.5 - 4 hours, is within the capabilities of VPX and should not be splitting the file.

As has been previously suggested, try exporting direct to MP4 h.264.

John EB

VPX 16, Movie Studio 2025, and earlier versions 2015 and 2016, Music Maker Premium 2024.

PC - running Windows 11 23H2 Professional on Intel i7-8700K 3.2 GHz, 16GB RAM, RTX 2060 6GB 192-bit GDDR6, 1 x 1Tb Sabrent NVME SSD (OS and programs), 2 x 4TB (Data) internal HDD + 1TB internal SSD (Work disc), + 6 ext backup HDDs.

Laptop - Lenovo Legion 5i Phantom - running Windows 11 23H2 on Intel Core i7-10750H, 16GB DDR4-SDRAM, 512GB SSD, 43.9 cm screen Full HD 1920 x 1080, Intel UHD 630 iGPU and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 (6GB GDDR6)

Sony FDR-AX53e Video camera, DJI Osmo Action 3 and Sony HDR-AS30V Sports cams.

Jamil-Taylor wrote on 2/28/2024, 3:45 PM

@Jamil-Taylor

Magix Movie Studio (and I assume VPX) does export OpenDML AVIs. Open one of your files in Mediainfo and look at the Format Profile; it is "OpenDML". I'm no expert on OpenDML (I use

Okay -- I performed the export and have exact file info. The software again split the exported AVI into two files:

Mediainfo does show OpenDML for just one of the files: SAMPLE_001.avi. The other file it shows no information. It looks like the app quit unexpectedly. The larger file is not even playable.

When I use DivX Pro to combine the two files, it repairs the issue resulting in a playable video.

Here is what Mediainfo shows for the two files. After I convert and combine both using DivX Pro, the resulting divx file is playable. The divx utility repairs the broken video.

This is a Windows 11 Pro workstation with 192GB RAM and a i9 14900K CPU. The export only takes 1.5 hours. Yes -- the file system is NTFS only.

johnebaker wrote on 2/28/2024, 4:03 PM

@Jamil-Taylor

Hi

. . . . The larger file is not even playable . . . .

It won't because until the file is correctly closed, the header information is not written to the file header.

An interesting puzzle as to why the file is being split.

When you use DivX to do the final conversion what settings are you using ie:

  • Container file format ie AVI, MP4
     
  • Codecs for video and audio
     
  • Average bitrate
     
  • Maximum Bitrate
     
  • Quality setting (if there is one)
     

Old versions of VPX did support, when DivX was installed, AVI export with the option to use the DivX encoder, it also supported the Xvid encoder.

I cannot test as the download from DivX is blocked by my Antivirus due to a 'malware'.

John EB

Last changed by johnebaker on 2/28/2024, 4:04 PM, changed a total of 1 times.

VPX 16, Movie Studio 2025, and earlier versions 2015 and 2016, Music Maker Premium 2024.

PC - running Windows 11 23H2 Professional on Intel i7-8700K 3.2 GHz, 16GB RAM, RTX 2060 6GB 192-bit GDDR6, 1 x 1Tb Sabrent NVME SSD (OS and programs), 2 x 4TB (Data) internal HDD + 1TB internal SSD (Work disc), + 6 ext backup HDDs.

Laptop - Lenovo Legion 5i Phantom - running Windows 11 23H2 on Intel Core i7-10750H, 16GB DDR4-SDRAM, 512GB SSD, 43.9 cm screen Full HD 1920 x 1080, Intel UHD 630 iGPU and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 (6GB GDDR6)

Sony FDR-AX53e Video camera, DJI Osmo Action 3 and Sony HDR-AS30V Sports cams.

Jamil-Taylor wrote on 2/28/2024, 4:16 PM

For divx I set it for 2 pass 8220kbps avg bitrate; 320kbps MP3 audio. The resulting quality is actually very good at 9.6GB video file.

 

johnebaker wrote on 2/29/2024, 3:40 AM

@Jamil-Taylor

Hi

Which video codec - h.264 or h.265 etc?

John EB

VPX 16, Movie Studio 2025, and earlier versions 2015 and 2016, Music Maker Premium 2024.

PC - running Windows 11 23H2 Professional on Intel i7-8700K 3.2 GHz, 16GB RAM, RTX 2060 6GB 192-bit GDDR6, 1 x 1Tb Sabrent NVME SSD (OS and programs), 2 x 4TB (Data) internal HDD + 1TB internal SSD (Work disc), + 6 ext backup HDDs.

Laptop - Lenovo Legion 5i Phantom - running Windows 11 23H2 on Intel Core i7-10750H, 16GB DDR4-SDRAM, 512GB SSD, 43.9 cm screen Full HD 1920 x 1080, Intel UHD 630 iGPU and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 (6GB GDDR6)

Sony FDR-AX53e Video camera, DJI Osmo Action 3 and Sony HDR-AS30V Sports cams.

Jamil-Taylor wrote on 2/29/2024, 5:08 AM

It's labeled as DivX HEVC 1080p.

Google searching tells me it's H.265: https://www.divx.com/en/software/technologies/hevc/

 

johnebaker wrote on 2/29/2024, 5:37 AM

@Jamil-Taylor

Hi

Have you tried exporting direct from VPX using the HEVC MP4 FullHD 1920x1080 24 fps preset?

The preset is near enough identical to the DivX settings you are using, the Average Bitrate setting is close enough, see note below.

The audio will be encoded as AAC - which is higher quality than MP3.

Note: the Average bitrate is a target for the encoder to achieve, what you actually get will depend on the levels of motion and detail in the video.

John EB

VPX 16, Movie Studio 2025, and earlier versions 2015 and 2016, Music Maker Premium 2024.

PC - running Windows 11 23H2 Professional on Intel i7-8700K 3.2 GHz, 16GB RAM, RTX 2060 6GB 192-bit GDDR6, 1 x 1Tb Sabrent NVME SSD (OS and programs), 2 x 4TB (Data) internal HDD + 1TB internal SSD (Work disc), + 6 ext backup HDDs.

Laptop - Lenovo Legion 5i Phantom - running Windows 11 23H2 on Intel Core i7-10750H, 16GB DDR4-SDRAM, 512GB SSD, 43.9 cm screen Full HD 1920 x 1080, Intel UHD 630 iGPU and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 (6GB GDDR6)

Sony FDR-AX53e Video camera, DJI Osmo Action 3 and Sony HDR-AS30V Sports cams.

Jamil-Taylor wrote on 2/29/2024, 6:25 AM

I would like to use DivX Pro that I have been using for quite a long time.

Perhaps I I need to open a support ticket for investigation.

I am trying the export now to see if this works better than the AVI export that failed. The estimated time is not accurate so far, but it appears to be running faster than the AVI export was.

Okay. The MP4 export worked successfully. The AVI export feature is broken in the latest Video Pro X15.

The MP4 export created at a lower video average bitrate is significantly larger than the DivX Pro conversion from lossless Intel AVI.

 

AAProds wrote on 2/29/2024, 7:59 AM

@Jamil-Taylor

The MP4 export created at a lower video average bitrate is significantly larger than the DivX Pro conversion 

Just go into the advanced Export settings for "HEVC" and change the average bitrate to 8000 (to allow for the audio) and set the max bitrate to 10,000. Change the Coding Quality to Best. Back on the main export screen, type in 23.976 in the frame rate box. Export. Compare quality. 😉

All my forum comments are based on or refer to my System 1.

My struggle is over! I built my (now) system 2 in 2011 when DV was king and MPEG 2 was just coming onto the scene and I needed a more powerful system to cope. Since then we've advanced to MP4 and to bigger and bigger resolutions. I was really suffering, not so much in editing (with proxies) but in encoding, which just took ages. A video, with Neat Video noise reduction applied, would encode at 12% of film speed. My new system 1 does the same job at 160% of film speed. Marvellous. I'm keeping my old system as a capture station for analogue video tapes and DV.

System 1

Windows 11 v23H2 severely modified by Openshell and ExplorerPatcher

Power supply: 850W Cooler Master (should have got modular)

CPU: Intel i7 13700K running at 3400mhz, cooled by a Kraken 2x140mm All In One liquid cooler.

RAM: 64gb (2x32gb sticks) G.Skill "Ripjaws" DDR4 3200Mhz

GPU 1: iGPU UHD 770

GPU 2: NVidia RTX 3060Ti Windforce 8gb

C drive: NVME 500gb

Various other SSD and HDDs.

Monitor: 27"/68cm Samsung, 2560 x 1440, 43 pixels/cm.

MEP 2021 version 20.0.1.80

Movie Studio 2023 version 22.0.3.172

Magix Video Easy version 7.0.1.145

System 2

(Still in use for TV and videotape capture)

Windows 10 v22H2

CPU: i5-750 at 2670mhz with 12gb RAM

Onboard IEEE1394 (Firewire) port

GPU: ATI Radeon HD 4770 (512mb) which is ignored by MEP

Hard drives: C Drive 256gb SSD, various other HDDs.

Monitor: Dell 22"/56cm, 1680x1050, 35 pixels/cm

MEP 2021 version 20.0.1.80

Movie Studio 2023 version 22.0.3.172

VPX 12

Jamil-Taylor wrote on 2/29/2024, 8:41 AM

What I am stating is that DivX Pro at 8220kbps avg bitrate created a 9.68GB video file.

The MP4 created was 12GB at only 7000kbps avg bitrate.

The reason I paid for DivX Pro was to get the smallest video files. I want to use it.

 

johnebaker wrote on 2/29/2024, 11:08 AM

@Jamil-Taylor

Hi

. . . . I paid for DivX Pro was to get the smallest video files . . . .

Can you post all the text from the Text view of a MediaInfo analysis of the DivX 9.68GB file.

John EB

VPX 16, Movie Studio 2025, and earlier versions 2015 and 2016, Music Maker Premium 2024.

PC - running Windows 11 23H2 Professional on Intel i7-8700K 3.2 GHz, 16GB RAM, RTX 2060 6GB 192-bit GDDR6, 1 x 1Tb Sabrent NVME SSD (OS and programs), 2 x 4TB (Data) internal HDD + 1TB internal SSD (Work disc), + 6 ext backup HDDs.

Laptop - Lenovo Legion 5i Phantom - running Windows 11 23H2 on Intel Core i7-10750H, 16GB DDR4-SDRAM, 512GB SSD, 43.9 cm screen Full HD 1920 x 1080, Intel UHD 630 iGPU and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 (6GB GDDR6)

Sony FDR-AX53e Video camera, DJI Osmo Action 3 and Sony HDR-AS30V Sports cams.

Jamil-Taylor wrote on 2/29/2024, 12:18 PM

I do not want to spend any more time on this.

I simply want AVI export to work. This is a feature offered, and I want to use it.

Here's mediainfo:

johnebaker wrote on 2/29/2024, 2:54 PM

@Jamil-Taylor, @AAProds

Hi

. . . .I simply want AVI export to work. This is a feature offered, and I want to use it.. . . .

Unfortunately, the issue with the AVI export splitting the AVI file is preventing this and we cannot determine why it is doing this.

Al and I have been looking at alternative routes to get what you are looking for.

If you wish to continue down the very circuitous route you are trying to use, I would suggest raising a support ticket with Magix.

Click the Support link at the top of this page, select Video Pro X, scroll down to the bottom of the page and select Contact support, fill in the forms presented and scroll down selecting Send email.

Thanks for the MediaInfo data info.

This further complicates the issue, for 2 reasons:

  1. the line FileExtension_invalid: avi
     
  2. the video is encoded h.263, not h.265 as previously quoted.

This suggests something is wrong with the process in or using DivX. I and another forum member, who has not commented here, have tried downloading DivX codecs from the DivX website, however we cannot install it - the download is being quarantined as containing Malware.

One last thought - if you are wanting h.265 encoded video, to reduce the file size and are not intending to edit the final output, you can, without detriment to the picture quality, use the settings I recommended before for exporting direct from VPX, making one parameter change in the Advanced settings of the export to reduce the file size.

Changing the Maximum GOP length to one of the values listed below will give the following, approximate, file size reductions.

value = 30 ~ 10%

value = 50 ~ 30%

Do not use a value any higher than 50 for the video framerate of 24 fps .

The container file format will be MPEG-4 (.mp4) which means the video will play on the majority of devices supporting h.265 (HEVC) without the need for DivX

John EB

VPX 16, Movie Studio 2025, and earlier versions 2015 and 2016, Music Maker Premium 2024.

PC - running Windows 11 23H2 Professional on Intel i7-8700K 3.2 GHz, 16GB RAM, RTX 2060 6GB 192-bit GDDR6, 1 x 1Tb Sabrent NVME SSD (OS and programs), 2 x 4TB (Data) internal HDD + 1TB internal SSD (Work disc), + 6 ext backup HDDs.

Laptop - Lenovo Legion 5i Phantom - running Windows 11 23H2 on Intel Core i7-10750H, 16GB DDR4-SDRAM, 512GB SSD, 43.9 cm screen Full HD 1920 x 1080, Intel UHD 630 iGPU and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 (6GB GDDR6)

Sony FDR-AX53e Video camera, DJI Osmo Action 3 and Sony HDR-AS30V Sports cams.

AAProds wrote on 2/29/2024, 6:07 PM

@Jamil-Taylor

File size is only function of bitrate and time, nothing else.

What I am stating is that DivX Pro at 8220kbps avg bitrate created a 9.68GB video file.

Not so; your Mediainfo shows the bitrate of your DivX file as only 6251:

If you did a 6251kbps export from Magix, you'd get the same size.

The reason I paid for DivX Pro was to get the smallest video files.

To reduce the file size, all you need to do is lower the export bitrate, regardless of what program you use to create the file.

The real issue is the perceived quality; only you can make that assessment.

I suggest doing a Magix HEVC export at 6000kbps (you don't have to do the whole video, just choose a short range) and compare it with your DivX file. If the quality is the same, you will save yourself time and have a more efficient process.

If you have no resolution on a fix for the Uncompressed AVI export and you still want to go down the AVI>DivX route, you could install the Lagarith lossless AVI codec to export your AVI. LAGS files are around 1/3 of the size of uncompressed AVIs such as IYUV. Hopefully Magix won't split that.

Last changed by AAProds on 2/29/2024, 6:56 PM, changed a total of 1 times.

All my forum comments are based on or refer to my System 1.

My struggle is over! I built my (now) system 2 in 2011 when DV was king and MPEG 2 was just coming onto the scene and I needed a more powerful system to cope. Since then we've advanced to MP4 and to bigger and bigger resolutions. I was really suffering, not so much in editing (with proxies) but in encoding, which just took ages. A video, with Neat Video noise reduction applied, would encode at 12% of film speed. My new system 1 does the same job at 160% of film speed. Marvellous. I'm keeping my old system as a capture station for analogue video tapes and DV.

System 1

Windows 11 v23H2 severely modified by Openshell and ExplorerPatcher

Power supply: 850W Cooler Master (should have got modular)

CPU: Intel i7 13700K running at 3400mhz, cooled by a Kraken 2x140mm All In One liquid cooler.

RAM: 64gb (2x32gb sticks) G.Skill "Ripjaws" DDR4 3200Mhz

GPU 1: iGPU UHD 770

GPU 2: NVidia RTX 3060Ti Windforce 8gb

C drive: NVME 500gb

Various other SSD and HDDs.

Monitor: 27"/68cm Samsung, 2560 x 1440, 43 pixels/cm.

MEP 2021 version 20.0.1.80

Movie Studio 2023 version 22.0.3.172

Magix Video Easy version 7.0.1.145

System 2

(Still in use for TV and videotape capture)

Windows 10 v22H2

CPU: i5-750 at 2670mhz with 12gb RAM

Onboard IEEE1394 (Firewire) port

GPU: ATI Radeon HD 4770 (512mb) which is ignored by MEP

Hard drives: C Drive 256gb SSD, various other HDDs.

Monitor: Dell 22"/56cm, 1680x1050, 35 pixels/cm

MEP 2021 version 20.0.1.80

Movie Studio 2023 version 22.0.3.172

VPX 12

AAProds wrote on 2/29/2024, 7:23 PM

I just did a test export to HEVC using Movie Studio 2024 (small brother of VPX). I set the average bitrate to 6000, max 7500, audio to 192. The export took 18 minutes. File size: 9.74GB.

Mediainfo:

General
Complete name                            : H:\Magix Info\Jamil\3-41 movie HEVC 6000-7500 192.MP4
Format                                   : MPEG-4
Format profile                           : Base Media
Codec ID                                 : iso4 (iso4/hvc1)
File size                                : 9.74 GiB
Duration                                 : 3 h 41 min
Overall bit rate mode                    : Variable
Overall bit rate                         : 6 295 kb/s
Frame rate                               : 23.976 FPS
Encoded date                             : 2024-03-01 01:01:45 UTC
Tagged date                              : 2024-03-01 01:01:45 UTC

Video
ID                                       : 1
Format                                   : HEVC
Format/Info                              : High Efficiency Video Coding
Format profile                           : Main@L4@Main
Codec ID                                 : hvc1
Codec ID/Info                            : High Efficiency Video Coding
Duration                                 : 3 h 41 min
Source duration                          : 3 h 41 min
Bit rate                                 : 6 099 kb/s
Width                                    : 1 920 pixels
Height                                   : 1 080 pixels
Display aspect ratio                     : 16:9
Frame rate mode                          : Constant
Frame rate                               : 23.976 (24000/1001) FPS
Color space                              : YUV
Chroma subsampling                       : 4:2:0
Bit depth                                : 8 bits
Bits/(Pixel*Frame)                       : 0.123
Stream size                              : 9.44 GiB (97%)
Source stream size                       : 9.44 GiB (97%)
Language                                 : English
Encoded date                             : 2024-03-01 01:01:45 UTC
Tagged date                              : 2024-03-01 01:01:45 UTC
Codec configuration box                  : hvcC

Audio
ID                                       : 2
Format                                   : AAC LC
Format/Info                              : Advanced Audio Codec Low Complexity
Codec ID                                 : mp4a-40-2
Duration                                 : 3 h 41 min
Bit rate mode                            : Variable
Bit rate                                 : 192 kb/s
Channel(s)                               : 2 channels
Channel layout                           : L R
Sampling rate                            : 48.0 kHz
Frame rate                               : 46.875 FPS (1024 SPF)
Compression mode                         : Lossy
Stream size                              : 304 MiB (3%)
Language                                 : English
Encoded date                             : 2024-03-01 01:01:45 UTC
Tagged date                              : 2024-03-01 01:01:45 UTC

 

All my forum comments are based on or refer to my System 1.

My struggle is over! I built my (now) system 2 in 2011 when DV was king and MPEG 2 was just coming onto the scene and I needed a more powerful system to cope. Since then we've advanced to MP4 and to bigger and bigger resolutions. I was really suffering, not so much in editing (with proxies) but in encoding, which just took ages. A video, with Neat Video noise reduction applied, would encode at 12% of film speed. My new system 1 does the same job at 160% of film speed. Marvellous. I'm keeping my old system as a capture station for analogue video tapes and DV.

System 1

Windows 11 v23H2 severely modified by Openshell and ExplorerPatcher

Power supply: 850W Cooler Master (should have got modular)

CPU: Intel i7 13700K running at 3400mhz, cooled by a Kraken 2x140mm All In One liquid cooler.

RAM: 64gb (2x32gb sticks) G.Skill "Ripjaws" DDR4 3200Mhz

GPU 1: iGPU UHD 770

GPU 2: NVidia RTX 3060Ti Windforce 8gb

C drive: NVME 500gb

Various other SSD and HDDs.

Monitor: 27"/68cm Samsung, 2560 x 1440, 43 pixels/cm.

MEP 2021 version 20.0.1.80

Movie Studio 2023 version 22.0.3.172

Magix Video Easy version 7.0.1.145

System 2

(Still in use for TV and videotape capture)

Windows 10 v22H2

CPU: i5-750 at 2670mhz with 12gb RAM

Onboard IEEE1394 (Firewire) port

GPU: ATI Radeon HD 4770 (512mb) which is ignored by MEP

Hard drives: C Drive 256gb SSD, various other HDDs.

Monitor: Dell 22"/56cm, 1680x1050, 35 pixels/cm

MEP 2021 version 20.0.1.80

Movie Studio 2023 version 22.0.3.172

VPX 12

Jamil-Taylor wrote on 2/29/2024, 10:28 PM

I appreciate your assistance.

DivX Pro has a setting for 2 pass that analyzes the video during the first pass and applies settings based on the initial review on the second pass. I specifically set it for an average bitrate of 8220kbps:

During analysis the settings get altered; hence 6251kbps was used. Can I manually spend time doing this? I could, but I don't want to. I would prefer DivX do this work for me, and I review the final result.

AAProds wrote on 2/29/2024, 11:10 PM

@Jamil-Taylor

Jamil, I was just pointing out that Magix is doing the right thing with it's file size.

As for why that DivX encoder is settling on 6200 when you told it to use 8200, that doesn't look right to me. After the first (analysis?) pass, it should be setting it's encoding to output 8200, not pick another of it's choosing.

Anyway, we now know that Magix and DivX are producing the correct files sizes; they are different because of the different bitrates being used.

Can I manually spend time doing this? I could, but I don't want to. I would prefer DivX do this work for me.

Well, with Magix, the only thing you have to do is pick a bitrate and off it goes, same as you picking 8220. How you determined that 8220 was good could just as easily have been applied to a Magix export.

All my forum comments are based on or refer to my System 1.

My struggle is over! I built my (now) system 2 in 2011 when DV was king and MPEG 2 was just coming onto the scene and I needed a more powerful system to cope. Since then we've advanced to MP4 and to bigger and bigger resolutions. I was really suffering, not so much in editing (with proxies) but in encoding, which just took ages. A video, with Neat Video noise reduction applied, would encode at 12% of film speed. My new system 1 does the same job at 160% of film speed. Marvellous. I'm keeping my old system as a capture station for analogue video tapes and DV.

System 1

Windows 11 v23H2 severely modified by Openshell and ExplorerPatcher

Power supply: 850W Cooler Master (should have got modular)

CPU: Intel i7 13700K running at 3400mhz, cooled by a Kraken 2x140mm All In One liquid cooler.

RAM: 64gb (2x32gb sticks) G.Skill "Ripjaws" DDR4 3200Mhz

GPU 1: iGPU UHD 770

GPU 2: NVidia RTX 3060Ti Windforce 8gb

C drive: NVME 500gb

Various other SSD and HDDs.

Monitor: 27"/68cm Samsung, 2560 x 1440, 43 pixels/cm.

MEP 2021 version 20.0.1.80

Movie Studio 2023 version 22.0.3.172

Magix Video Easy version 7.0.1.145

System 2

(Still in use for TV and videotape capture)

Windows 10 v22H2

CPU: i5-750 at 2670mhz with 12gb RAM

Onboard IEEE1394 (Firewire) port

GPU: ATI Radeon HD 4770 (512mb) which is ignored by MEP

Hard drives: C Drive 256gb SSD, various other HDDs.

Monitor: Dell 22"/56cm, 1680x1050, 35 pixels/cm

MEP 2021 version 20.0.1.80

Movie Studio 2023 version 22.0.3.172

VPX 12

johnebaker wrote on 3/1/2024, 2:40 AM

@AAProds

Hi Al

How much file size reduction do you get if you increase the GOP setting to 50?

I find this can also reduce file size as I quoted above and has no detrimental effect on perceived quality.

The only issue with increasing the GOP length is should not be edited further.

John EB

Last changed by johnebaker on 3/1/2024, 2:40 AM, changed a total of 1 times.

VPX 16, Movie Studio 2025, and earlier versions 2015 and 2016, Music Maker Premium 2024.

PC - running Windows 11 23H2 Professional on Intel i7-8700K 3.2 GHz, 16GB RAM, RTX 2060 6GB 192-bit GDDR6, 1 x 1Tb Sabrent NVME SSD (OS and programs), 2 x 4TB (Data) internal HDD + 1TB internal SSD (Work disc), + 6 ext backup HDDs.

Laptop - Lenovo Legion 5i Phantom - running Windows 11 23H2 on Intel Core i7-10750H, 16GB DDR4-SDRAM, 512GB SSD, 43.9 cm screen Full HD 1920 x 1080, Intel UHD 630 iGPU and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 (6GB GDDR6)

Sony FDR-AX53e Video camera, DJI Osmo Action 3 and Sony HDR-AS30V Sports cams.

AAProds wrote on 3/1/2024, 3:17 AM

@johnebaker @Jamil-Taylor

John, not much! 3MB or so...

All my forum comments are based on or refer to my System 1.

My struggle is over! I built my (now) system 2 in 2011 when DV was king and MPEG 2 was just coming onto the scene and I needed a more powerful system to cope. Since then we've advanced to MP4 and to bigger and bigger resolutions. I was really suffering, not so much in editing (with proxies) but in encoding, which just took ages. A video, with Neat Video noise reduction applied, would encode at 12% of film speed. My new system 1 does the same job at 160% of film speed. Marvellous. I'm keeping my old system as a capture station for analogue video tapes and DV.

System 1

Windows 11 v23H2 severely modified by Openshell and ExplorerPatcher

Power supply: 850W Cooler Master (should have got modular)

CPU: Intel i7 13700K running at 3400mhz, cooled by a Kraken 2x140mm All In One liquid cooler.

RAM: 64gb (2x32gb sticks) G.Skill "Ripjaws" DDR4 3200Mhz

GPU 1: iGPU UHD 770

GPU 2: NVidia RTX 3060Ti Windforce 8gb

C drive: NVME 500gb

Various other SSD and HDDs.

Monitor: 27"/68cm Samsung, 2560 x 1440, 43 pixels/cm.

MEP 2021 version 20.0.1.80

Movie Studio 2023 version 22.0.3.172

Magix Video Easy version 7.0.1.145

System 2

(Still in use for TV and videotape capture)

Windows 10 v22H2

CPU: i5-750 at 2670mhz with 12gb RAM

Onboard IEEE1394 (Firewire) port

GPU: ATI Radeon HD 4770 (512mb) which is ignored by MEP

Hard drives: C Drive 256gb SSD, various other HDDs.

Monitor: Dell 22"/56cm, 1680x1050, 35 pixels/cm

MEP 2021 version 20.0.1.80

Movie Studio 2023 version 22.0.3.172

VPX 12

johnebaker wrote on 3/1/2024, 3:42 AM

@AAProds, @Jamil-Taylor

Hi

After further testing with a variety of scenarios from virtually no action to fast action and, or, high detail the reduction in file size is variable ranging from 30+% to 2-3 %.

John EB

VPX 16, Movie Studio 2025, and earlier versions 2015 and 2016, Music Maker Premium 2024.

PC - running Windows 11 23H2 Professional on Intel i7-8700K 3.2 GHz, 16GB RAM, RTX 2060 6GB 192-bit GDDR6, 1 x 1Tb Sabrent NVME SSD (OS and programs), 2 x 4TB (Data) internal HDD + 1TB internal SSD (Work disc), + 6 ext backup HDDs.

Laptop - Lenovo Legion 5i Phantom - running Windows 11 23H2 on Intel Core i7-10750H, 16GB DDR4-SDRAM, 512GB SSD, 43.9 cm screen Full HD 1920 x 1080, Intel UHD 630 iGPU and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 (6GB GDDR6)

Sony FDR-AX53e Video camera, DJI Osmo Action 3 and Sony HDR-AS30V Sports cams.

Jamil-Taylor wrote on 3/2/2024, 4:05 PM

@Jamil-Taylor

Not so; your Mediainfo shows the bitrate of your DivX file as only 6251:

This was due to my settings. I did this again with changed settings. Here is the result for a near pristine video with perfect image quality using DivX Pro:

The file is slightly larger only due to a change in audio codec. This is still significantly smaller using divx, and this is exactly why I purchased a license to use DivX Pro.

It looks like Magix Video Pro X15 can still output using DixV, but only when I use export to device. Unfortunately, DivX's phenomenal video compression features get lost, and Video Pro X results in a large video. Using DivX Pro itself results in smaller videos.