A good size compromise that produces small size but with video quality superior to SD DVD is the BD->BD-9 compression in DVDFab, where the files are written to a DL DVD and played on a BD player. A high-end CPU and GPU are a must if you don't want it to take hours and hours.
[QUOTE=lilewis;28411]Thanks for your replies.
I thought the picture quality of the original up-scaled SD movie was pretty good. I'm sitting about 10 ft away from a brand new Toshiba REGZA 46XV645U.
I started to run DVDfab on a BR25 to see if the 30 to 25 gb compression would make any significant difference, but the program projected 6 hrs just to read/compress, so I shut it down.
Considering the cost of a blank SD DVD vs a blank BR, along with the length of time to process if compression is required, I suspect the effort isn't worth the reward - except to the perfectionist.
So if a BR movie is 90-110 min in length , making a backup on BD25 is fine, but if it's longer than that, I think I'll just buy the SD version.[/QUOTE]