Originally posted by HRS2403
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Regarding CUDA with an Nvidia GTX460, Win7, 64-bit, I have had problems with the resulting burn "stuttering" or even freezing up multiple Blu-ray players at the same point in a disc, with a full-disk copy, using 8.0.7.3. Turning off CUDA, and using software-only encoding/decoding, fixes the problem.
For some reason, this problem has only occurred with two recent Disney titles, and only when burning to BD-RE DL disks (Memorex and Sony).
I'll see if this is fixed with future Blu-ray Copy releases, but for the moment I'm keeping CUDA turned off.
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I should have read a little further, "lightning encoding" doesn't work with CUDA.
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I customized a AMD Phenom X6 w/16mb ram, win 7-64 and a gtx 580 video card and some blu-rays still take 4 hrs. I didnt know about the "lightning encoding" so I will see if that makes any difference.
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I have 2 systems that are identical in spec but the graphic card.
CUDA does make a big difference indeed !!!!
Ripping to the HDD will not make the slightest difference as the GFX card will not be used and all depends on your drive read speed.
Now with 50gb to 25gb full disc its a different story, CUDA wins hands down for me.
Paul
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After getting a 460 GTX
I finally bought a 460 GTX and didn't see much, if any improvement in BD copy speeds when not using a compression profile. FYI, in case you were planning on upgrading the graphics card and expecting it to speed up bluray copy when not compressing.
Bluray discs with cinavia protection copy very slowly for me, down to 3-5 MB/s compared to the 9-14MB/s for discs without it.
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I am roughly seeing 40-60 mins per blu-ray on most discs. Some blu-rays take as much as 4 hours (I think Takers was one of them. Cinavia protection causing this perhaps?)
Originally posted by maineman View PostYes, you will realize some benefit, but to a lesser extent than when compressing or converting as discussed above.
What kind of times are you seeing now?
Honestly, since you have no plans to compress/convert, it's probably not worth the cost, but this is totally a shot from the hip
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Originally posted by vvume View PostI still looking for a clear answer to my question. Will the CUDA acceleration benefit me if all I do is perform a full BD copy to the hard drive with no compression whatsoever (BD 50 profile)?
What kind of times are you seeing now?
Honestly, since you have no plans to compress/convert, it's probably not worth the cost, but this is totally a shot from the hip
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I still looking for a clear answer to my question. Will the CUDA acceleration benefit me if all I do is perform a full BD copy to the hard drive with no compression whatsoever (BD 50 profile)?
Originally posted by vvume View PostIs there any compression or conversion involved in copying a blu-ray from disk to the hard drive (BD 50 full size)? Or does it benefit only when compression has been selected.
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This is a very good topic and something I wish I had known before I built my system. I would have most definitely picked up a Nvidia card instead of my Sapphire Radeon HD 5770 1GB 128-bit video card, but it's sufficient. I can compress a 40-50GB Blu-ray disc with 53% compression just shy of 2 hours. Not bad at all. Oh, I'm running an Intel i7 950 3.07GHz Quad Core with 64-Bit Windows 7 with 12GB of DDR3 Corsair XMS3 RAM.Last edited by SuperFist; 02-03-2011, 11:44 PM.
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I would highly suggest, if you plan on compressing, to rip the full disk to your hard drive first, then compress from hard drive to hard drive, as it will save wear and tear on your burner and will most of the time go faster this way.
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Is there any compression or conversion involved in copying a blu-ray from disk to the hard drive (BD 50 full size)? Or does it benefit only when compression has been selected.
Originally posted by signals View PostATI streams not currently supported.
The speed increase can be significant, especially if you are compressing or converting from a HDD Source.
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ATI streams not currently supported.
The speed increase can be significant, especially if you are compressing or converting from a HDD Source.
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Video card upgrade to speed up DVDFab?
I have a Core i5 2.66GHz w/8GB RAM and a ATI 4350 video card for a HTPC connected to a 1080p LCD TV. I never play games and so I have never considered upgrading to a better video card. I use DVDFab to copy Blu-ray and ArcSoft TotalMedia Theater 5 to playback media.
After seeing recent news about DVDFab speeding up Bluray copy on NVidia CUDA, I have two questions:
(a) Is ATI Stream not supported?
(b) Will I see a significant benefit in terms of bluray copy speed if I upgrade my video card to something like GT 450 (Fermi) or HD 5670, if ATI stream is supported on question (a) above.Tags: None
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