

You can use 10:11 for 720x480 4:3 VHSĪlso, you can set -tff or -bff in the extra command line box to enter the field order, so you get proper interlaced encoding and signaling Also check - it might accept the lossless version of x264 and treat it like YUV as Premiere does (in vdub2 x264 configuration, select single pass - lossless)Īlso, you can set the aspect ratio with SAR width and SAR height. Pro versions will like Premiere Pro, but 4:2:2 tends not to be a consumer oriented format. But did you check to see if Elements accepts the 4:2:2 variety of h264 ? It might not.

You advised me that, all things considered, I should be ok if in VirtualDub I select H264 as the compressor but in its Configuration dialog turn the CRF down to 1 (and set YUV to 4:2:2). In an earlier discussion, I noted that my intended workflow (VHS to digital) must take into account that my video editing program, Adobe Premier Elements, does not support HuffYUV or other lossless codec I must use a supported video codec, which in this case will be H.264.
