Little House on the Prairie (1974) S01 Season 1 [Complete Deluxe Remastered Edition](1080p BDRip x265 crf22 S76 E-AC3 2 0 MULTI3)[cHorse]
The life and adventures of the Ingalls family in the 19th century American West.
Genre: Drama, Family, Western
Stars: Scottie MacGregor, Melissa Gilbert, Dean Butler, Richard Bull, Kevin Hagen, Dabbs Greer, Victor French, Jonathan Gilbert, Pamela Roylance, Stan Ivar, Lindsay Kennedy, Leslie Landon, Michael Landon, David Friedman, Karen Grassle, Allison Balson, Matthew Laborteaux, Brenda Turnbaugh, Lindsay Greenbush, Sidney Greenbush, Shannen Doherty, Ketty Lester, Patrick Labyorteaux, Merlin Olsen, Jason Bateman, Wendi Turnbaugh, Lucy Lee Flippin, Missy Francis, Linwood Boomer, Alison Arngrim, Jennifer Marie Steffin, Michelle Steffin, Hersha Parady, Charlotte Stewart, Karl Swenson, Melissa Sue Anderson, Jason Bateman, Steve R. Tracy
VIDEO: x265 / 1080p / SDR / crf22 / 2.5-6Mbps from 18-22Mbps originals / video size reduction = 82%
ENCODER NOTES: While certainly not a transparent encode, for this show specifically, the encode settings were/are believed to be more than sufficient! Enjoy!
AUDIO #1: E-AC3 2.0 / 448 kbps (from DTS-HD MA 2.0 / 2000 kbps / original)
AUDIO #2: AAC 2.0 / 160 kbps (from DTS-HD 2.0)
AUDIO #3: AC3 2.0 [French] / 192 kbps / original
AUDIO #4: AC3 2.0 [Spanish] / 192 kbps / original
SUBTITLES: English (SDH)
SOURCE(S): S1 BD discs (200+ GB)
DETAILED ENCODER SETTINGS (always slow-preset with tweaks)
cpuid=2 / frame-threads=3 / wpp / no-pmode / no-pme / no-psnr / ssim / log-level=2 / input-csp=1 / input-res=1464x1080 / interlace=0 / total-frames=0 / level-idc=0 / high-tier=1 / uhd-bd=0 / ref=4 / no-allow-non-conformance / no-repeat-headers / annexb / no-aud / no-hrd / info / hash=0 / no-temporal-layers / open-gop / min-keyint=24 / keyint=240 / gop-lookahead=0 / bframes=8 / b-adapt=2 / b-pyramid / bframe-bias=0 / rc-lookahead=80 / lookahead-slices=4 / scenecut=40 / hist-scenecut=0 / radl=0 / no-splice / no-intra-refresh / ctu=64 / min-cu-size=8 / no-rect / no-amp / max-tu-size=32 / tu-inter-depth=1 / tu-intra-depth=1 / limit-tu=0 / rdoq-level=2 / dynamic-rd=0.00 / no-ssim-rd / signhide / no-tskip / nr-intra=0 / nr-inter=0 / no-constrained-intra / no-strong-intra-smoothing / max-merge=3 / limit-refs=3 / limit-modes / me=3 / subme=5 / merange=57 / temporal-mvp / no-frame-dup / no-hme / weightp / no-weightb / no-analyze-src-pics / deblock=0:0 / sao / no-sao-non-deblock / rd=4 / selective-sao=4 / no-early-skip / rskip / no-fast-intra / no-tskip-fast / no-cu-lossless / no-b-intra / no-splitrd-skip / rdpenalty=0 / psy-rd=1.30 / psy-rdoq=2.00 / no-rd-refine / no-lossless / cbqpoffs=0 / crqpoffs=0 / rc=crf / crf=22.0 / qcomp=0.60 / qpstep=4 / stats-write=0 / stats-read=0 / ipratio=1.40 / pbratio=1.30 / aq-mode=4 / aq-strength=1.10 / cutree / zone-count=0 / no-strict-cbr / qg-size=32 / no-rc-grain / qpmax=69 / qpmin=0 / no-const-vbv / sar=1 / overscan=0 / videoformat=5 / range=0 / colorprim=1 / transfer=1 / colormatrix=1 / chromaloc=0 / display-window=0 / cll=0,0 / min-luma=0 / max-luma=1023 / log2-max-poc-lsb=8 / vui-timing-info / vui-hrd-info / slices=1 / no-opt-qp-pps / no-opt-ref-list-length-pps / no-multi-pass-opt-rps / scenecut-bias=0.05 / hist-threshold=0.03 / no-opt-cu-delta-qp / no-aq-motion / no-hdr10 / no-hdr10-opt / no-dhdr10-opt / no-idr-recovery-sei / analysis-reuse-level=0 / analysis-save-reuse-level=0 / analysis-load-reuse-level=0 / scale-factor=0 / refine-intra=0 / refine-inter=0 / refine-mv=1 / refine-ctu-distortion=0 / no-limit-sao / ctu-info=0 / no-lowpass-dct / refine-analysis-type=0 / copy-pic=1 / max-ausize-factor=1.0 / no-dynamic-refine / no-single-sei / no-hevc-aq / no-svt / no-field / qp-adaptation-range=1.00 / scenecut-aware-qp=0conformance-window-offsets / right=0 / bottom=0 / decoder-max-rate=0 / no-vbv-live-multi-pass
NOTES ON SSIM
The SSIM measures the accuracy of the outputted encode v the source. If the source is sharp, an encode score of 90+ will also be sharp and look extremely close to the original. If a source is blurry and/or out of focus, an encode score of 90+ will still be blurry and out of focus. SSIM only measures how close it is to the source material. An "e;S##"e; is a score where filters where NOT used and an "e;FS##"e; is an encode where filters were used, usually for insane amounts of grain/noise. Filters can tilt/cheat the score in a positive way but look far different from, but possibly "e;better"e; than, the original so bear that in mind. Again, the SSIM score represents how accurately the content has been encoded when compared to the original. Addition things can skew the rating down such as home video footage, older-grainy footage, etc... To make things simple, and they are really not, just think of it as a grade; where a S91 would be an A and a S75 would be a C effort.