

ripping dvd to iso on hard drive using dvd decryptorĢ. I haven't actually got it to work quite right yet. I would like to see this done here and also ask for anyone who will suggest buying a DVD player that does this for you to stay out of this discussion. I have seen various forums at doom9 in regards to this however none of them give step by step instructions or straight answers on a successful conversion. I would like to see a full guide for step by step as easy as it gets instructions on PAL DVD to NTSC DVD with full menus, extras, chapters, etc as well as NTSC DVD to PAL DVD with full menus, extras, chapters, etc conversion using Numenu4u with all associated and necessary software’s such as options for Sonic Scenarist as well as Muxman. Basic copying/ripping, and then search the DVD hacks pages (menu on left) for more on machine hacks.

This involves IFOEDIT, do a search to find out more.Īnd let's not forget, make your discs REGION FREE. This can trick several players that would otherwise not play the disc. This was recently covered in the forums, do a search.Īnd finally, there is a patch method, where you change the disc information (which designates a disc PAL or NTSC) but do not touch the video at all. An NTSC discs with 25fps (so-called NTSC-50), or a PAL disc with 29.97 (PAL-60) framerate. Just convert the colorspace/resolution and leave the framerate alone. Your results depend entirely on the source and the conversion settings.ĭVD players output "quasi" signals, and this can be re-created in encoder software. Very well covered in the varying forums, just do a search. There are also several other methods (not all-in-one tools) that can convert video, then allow you to re-author manually. It will almost always look better than software conversions.

Especially if you have a large collection of "foreign" discs. If you just want to watch the disc, use one of these players. In Europe and elsewhere (PAL land), most players do both.

Probably half or more of all NTSC players sold these days can do both PAL and NTSC just fine. In the USA (NTSC land), most of the low-cost ($25-40) Chinese-made players and recorders already do both. The simplest way to play PAL or NTSC, of course, is to just get a player that does both.
