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Fly through quality

Anonymous
Not applicable
I just finished creating two fly throughs to present to a client but I'm concerned about the quality of the playback. These are the first fly throughs I have created so please bear with me. The presentation of these movies is via the internet as a streamed video since the client is currently on vacation, traveling the world. Because of the delivery method, I resized them down by 50% to save on space. I also compressed them as MPEG4-Video to get the file size down, but they are very pixelated and just crappy looking overall. Does anyone have any suggestions on how to get a good quality fly through that plays for 30 seconds and is under 2 megs in size? Thanks.
13 REPLIES 13
TomWaltz
Participant
what resolution/size are they (to begin with and your reduced), what compression software are you using, and what are your compression settings?
Tom Waltz
Link
Graphisoft Partner
Graphisoft Partner
Check out the discussion and comparison chart posted here.

Under 2MB?? You may have the best luck with Photo JPEG.

Cheers,
Link.
Anonymous
Not applicable
Thanks Link. I checked it out and used the Sorenson compression like was suggessted, but it shot my file size up to 35MB. Currently I'm using MPEG-4 Video because I can get the smallest file size, but the quality is lacking. If it didn't have to be online I wouldn't worry about it, but I'm stuck between a rock and a hard place here. Oh well. Thanks for your help.
TomWaltz
Participant
Are you rendering straight from Archicad to MOV file? That might be part of your problem.

Most professional animation jobs are done frame by frame to a folder full of JPGs, allowing you to render the entire job at once, re-render small parts of it, pick up where you left off from a crash, or even run different frame ranges on multiple machines.

Once you have that series of images, use something like Quicktime Pro ($30) to assemble into a movie. The animation quality is much higher (no pixelation from Archicad's image compression). The downside of Quick Time is that its built-in compression is not great when making this kind of "series of images".

It's a shame, since the new H.264 compression is stunning when it works.... (I reduced a 4.3 GB MOV file to 115 MB with no visible loss of quality)
Tom Waltz
Thomas Holm
Booster
TomWaltz wrote:
It's a shame, since the new H.264 compression is stunning when it works.... (I reduced a 4.3 GB MOV file to 115 MB with no visible loss of quality)
Then how did you do that?
AC4.1-AC26SWE; MacOS13.5.1; MP5,1+MBP16,1
TomWaltz
Participant
I did it on a compiled video with combined CAD animation, live video, animation, and motion grapics assembled in Final Cut Pro, then used Quick Time Pro to reduce the file size.
Tom Waltz
Thomas Holm
Booster
Nice, but an expensive tool set. Is it possible to just join the jpgs to a video stream in some cheap ware that does just that, and THEN compress it using QTPro?
AC4.1-AC26SWE; MacOS13.5.1; MP5,1+MBP16,1
Anonymous
Not applicable
Could iMovie do the job? Or, for the less fortunate among us, Windows movie maker?

I know you can use both to assemble bunches of jpegs, but not sure how well they compress...
TomWaltz
Participant
Thomas wrote:
Nice, but an expensive tool set. Is it possible to just join the jpgs to a video stream in some cheap ware that does just that, and THEN compress it using QTPro?
When I tried that, it did not work (I tried it with iMovie and QTPro)... that's when I had to spring for FCP (in the middle of a project, no less....)
Tom Waltz