
- #MAKEMKV HOW TO CHOOSE RIGHT TITLE MOVIE#
- #MAKEMKV HOW TO CHOOSE RIGHT TITLE SOFTWARE#
- #MAKEMKV HOW TO CHOOSE RIGHT TITLE ISO#
- #MAKEMKV HOW TO CHOOSE RIGHT TITLE PS3#
I haven't got Expendables 2 yet but have copied successfully most of the difficult ones up to a few months ago.
#MAKEMKV HOW TO CHOOSE RIGHT TITLE MOVIE#
Most of the time I open disc after copied to hard drive with BDtoAVCHD as it shows the playlists and their respective m2ts order of files.īut sometimes this program doesn't even show the correct playlist so I end up reopening the file in dvdfab, selecting main movie only.īetween all this I usually find the correct playlist.yeah I know this is very unorthodox but it has worked for me so far. Of writing down the order of the m2ts files and see which playlist had the correct order. Usually check the fab forum and see if any discussion on particular discs, sometimes that works as to which title playlist is correct.įor maybe a couple, the total play time was multiple possible playlists so I went through the process I have run into about 5 titles or so that were somewhat difficult to figure out the exact playlist because more than one playlist had the correct total run time. If only one playlist shows total time then I simply use that playlist.

Then if I run into one of those discs with a bunch of fake playlists, I find out on web what the total run time is of movie. I use dvdfab and always copy the entire disc to hard drive (in folder form, don't know if that matters). It can't hurt to try, and at least then you'll know.Ĭal_tony, not to take away from the other suggestions as they might be better than the way I do it. If the problem goes away then it's either the way Passkey is ripping the disc, or BDinfo isn't being clever enough. If I was you, I'd try ripping a "problem" disc using HD-DVD/Blu-Ray Stream Extractor or Clown BD with Passkey just decrypting in the background. I don't recall ever having to pick which mpls file to rip, unless there's multiple versions of the same movie in different languages, but then it's easy to work out which one is correct. It's been a while since I've ripped a Bluray disc, but I'm sure even when ripping discs which use multiple mpls, if I run AnyDVD in the background and open the disc using HD-DVD/Blu-Ray Stream Extractor, it just opens the appropriate mpls file and displays which m2ts files it's using. Did you decide 00005.MPLS or 00004.M2TS were correct for Hunger Games? I can't vouch for it's accuracy, but I'm sure you could verify a few titles before you decide to trust it. It's a list of Bluray titles with their running times, and if you click on a title it takes you to the post with further details including the mpls/m2ts file to use. Next time I rip one of those discs I'll have to pay more attention.Īnyway, I came across this a little while ago.
#MAKEMKV HOW TO CHOOSE RIGHT TITLE SOFTWARE#
Maybe the only way to work out which is the correct title is by checking them, although you'd assume if a Bluray player can tell which one is correct then ripping software should be able to.

#MAKEMKV HOW TO CHOOSE RIGHT TITLE PS3#
It's possible you're not having problems when using the PS3 as many discs contain PS3 updates which I assume are installed automatically? You're not using an old version of BDInfo are you? It was updated to fix handling of multi-whatsit discs a while back.
#MAKEMKV HOW TO CHOOSE RIGHT TITLE ISO#
If you're not re-encoding it probably doesn't make much difference either way (you still have to mux the MKV containing the video with the audio stream after extracting with HD-DVD/Blu-Ray Stream Extractor), but if you're converting it might save time by eliminating the extra ISO step.


I use the latter mainly because it's a tool built into MeGUI, which I generally use for encoding. I don't know if ripping to an ISO could be causing the problem, but it there any particular reason you do it that way? I use the same method as fritzi93, only instead of running Passkey in the background and extracting with Clown BD, I run AnyDVD in the background and extract with HD-DVD/Blu-Ray Stream Extractor. Mind you I've only ripped a handful of those multi-whatsit discs using AnyDVD but I didn't seem to have any problems doing so. Have you tried AnyDVD HD? I'd be curious to see if it makes the same choices as DVDFab.
