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Mr. Specialist

macrumors member
Original poster
Jul 11, 2008
99
0
I am about to rip a DVD for the first time using Handbrake! I want to rip Mission Impossible 3, but on the back it says copy- protected. Will copy-protected DVDs be able to rip?
 
Actually, no. The Windows version of HandBrake didn't rip DVDs even when the Mac version did.

And the Mac version still does, you just need VLC for the codecs. You'll never know the difference.

How long usually does a regular DVD take to rip?
 
How long usually does a regular DVD take to rip?

The rip takes virtually no time at all. The encoding is what takes time.

With a 3.2GHz Gainestown Mac Pro running Snow Leopard, the encode takes about 10 minutes.

With a 2.4GHz Penryn MacBook Pro with 4GB of RAM, it takes a little over 2.5 hours.

With a 1.8GHz G5 iMac, it takes a little over 4.5 hours.
 
The rip takes virtually no time at all. The encoding is what takes time.

With a 3.2GHz Gainestown Mac Pro running Snow Leopard, the encode takes about 10 minutes.

With a 2.4GHz Penryn MacBook Pro with 4GB of RAM, it takes a little over 2.5 hours.

With a 1.8GHz G5 iMac, it takes a little over 4.5 hours.

Thanks
 
I'm in the process of ripping DVD's for the first time, too (getting ready for a 9-hour plane ride, ugh).

I'm using two computers: a year-old MacBook Pro (2.4 Ghz Core 2 Duo with 4GB RAM), and a year old iMac (2Ghz Core 2 Duo, 1GB RAM). The MBP has an Elgato 264 Turbo dongle, but I'm honestly not sure if it's being used or not.

I'm using the built-in "iPod" preset. Only change was to adjust the DRC to 2.0.

On the MBP, ripping & encoding is taking about 45% of the time of the DVD it's processing (ie, a 1hr 39m film processed in 44m). On the iMac it's averaging around 60%.

I have to say... I always thought ripping DVD's was a really complicated process (so much so that I've used bittorrent to get copies of movies I own on DVD)... but I feel like such a fool now! :) I'm actually looking forward to the flight now, just to get caught up on all the DVD's I got for Christmas!
 
How long usually does a regular DVD take to rip?

As others said, the encode time is the issue. A lot depends on the setting -- mine is at a pretty good near-DVD quality setting. WIth my 2.16Ghz MBP and 2GB of RAM (which is never the bottleneck), it takes just a slight bit longer than the actual video. On my Mac Mini G4, it was about 1.5x the video. WIth the newer processors, you may be getting under the length of the video by a good bit.

A good tip is if you need speed, close EVERYTHING else. I was doing one last night and it was about half the optimum speed because I was playing video in iTunes.
 
As others said, the encode time is the issue. A lot depends on the setting -- mine is at a pretty good near-DVD quality setting. WIth my 2.16Ghz MBP and 2GB of RAM (which is never the bottleneck), it takes just a slight bit longer than the actual video. On my Mac Mini G4, it was about 1.5x the video. WIth the newer processors, you may be getting under the length of the video by a good bit.

A good tip is if you need speed, close EVERYTHING else. I was doing one last night and it was about half the optimum speed because I was playing video in iTunes.


Is anyone having trouble ripping the dark knight? Even though I have a digital copy which they want me to pay for!, can anyone help?
 
Clarification

Y....eah. It's HandBrake. :p What other kind of DVDs would you need to rip?

You need VLC to take care of the ripping, anymore, though.

Could someone explain the need and role of VLC when using Handbrake?
Are you saying you need to use both programs when ripping a copy protected DVD? I thought VLC was simply a media "player." Thanks for any assistance in better understanding this process.
 
With a 2.4GHz Penryn MacBook Pro with 4GB of RAM, it takes a little over 2.5 hours.
Another interesting revelation, since I just ripped M:i:III on a 2.5GHz Penryn MacBook Pro with 4GB of RAM.... in exactly 35 minutes.
 
I've been using CloneDVD to exact copy all my DVDs to my computers. I then use Video Lan to play them. Works very well and can even copy only the movie portion to your computer without the extras.
 
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