![]() Finally, heere's MediaInfo info (the way you have suggested) - thanks again and please keep in touch Enabling the MPC-HC option "fast seek" seems to do the trick I'll try to encode the file once again choosing DXVA (it takes a long time to encode it - last time it took 16 hours). Unless you understand it, it's probably best just to leave it all at the default settings. The stuff under V.U.I in the x264 encoder configuration doesn't change the way the video is encoded, it just causes x264 to write info to the video stream. ![]() You're only seeing the bare minimum of info with the default view. For MediaInfo, try selecting View/HTML or View/Text. I disable it myself, but enabled it shouldn't slow seeking down by much at all. The setting to enable/disable that is under Options/Tweaks and it's labelled "fast seek". Plus by defaut, MPC-HC seeks to the nearest keyframe, so it doesn't do any of the "decoding around the seek point" stuff. The default GOP settings might make seeking using a standalone player a bit less smooth, but when it comes to seeking using a software player such as MPC-HC the difference in seeking time would probably be on the edge of human perception. The defaults will probably increase the quality a bit for a given bitrate. The defaults are 250 and 24 (or something similar, depending on the frame rate) when means the maximum GOP size is 10 seconds and 1 second is the minimum. That means the maximum GOP size is one second. ![]() When you use the bluray compatibility option, the keyint settings (GOP size) are automatically set to 24 and 1, or 25 and 1 etc, depending on the frame rate ( Edit: I got that a little wrong. Selecting DXVA as the target playback device should do. Via USB, support for High Profile, Level 4.1 is pretty standard. I doubt the settings you're using are the problem, but are you using AVCHD as the target playback device for a particular reason? If you're not creating AVCHD complaint video and just converting to MKV or MP4 etc to play the encodes via USB, none of that Bluray compatibility stuff is necessary. Normally you'd remux it to add additional streams such as audio and subtitles etc anyway. If the output is MKV and I'm correct, remuxing the output MKV should fix it. ![]() If you output directly to MKV, the resulting MKV isn't indexed, so MPC-HC indexes it when you try to play it which can make opening/seeking really slow (something like that). When you encode, are you outputting directly to MKV, and are you trying to play the re-encoded version without remuxing it? If you open the re-encoded version with MKVMergeGUI, or with MeGUI's MKV/MP4 muxer and resave it, does the saved version play better using MPC-HC?
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