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Tahuri VOB Tuhinga o mua FLV

Tahurihia Tō VOB Tuhinga o mua FLV kōnae ngawari

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Tukuatu ana

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Me pēhea te huri VOB Tuhinga o mua FLV

Hipanga 1: Tukuatu tō VOB ngā kōnae mā te whakamahi i te pātene i runga ake nei, mā te tōia me te whakataka rānei.

Hipanga 2: Pāwhiritia te pātene 'Tahuri' hei tīmata i te tahuritanga.

Hipanga 3: Tikiake i tō mea kua tahurihia FLV kōnae


VOB Tuhinga o mua FLV Ngā Pātai Auau mō te Tahuritanga

How do I re-encode VOB to FLV without quality loss?
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Upload your VOB file and our converter applies a CRF-based re-encode targeting visually-lossless FLV output (CRF 18 by default, lower = larger / higher quality). The codec is chosen to match the FLV container (H.264 / H.265 / VP9 / AV1 as appropriate).
It depends on the container. MP4 defaults to H.264 (broadest playback support); MKV and WebM default to H.265 and VP9 respectively for better compression at the same quality. You can override codec choice in the advanced options before conversion.
Yes — audio is re-muxed (when VOB and FLV share an audio codec) or re-encoded to AAC / Opus / Vorbis depending on what the FLV container supports. Multi-track audio (commentary, alternate languages) is preserved.
By default, framerate is unchanged (VOB 24fps stays 24fps in FLV). If you need to change it (e.g. interlaced 29.97 → progressive 30fps), use the framerate option, which handles 3:2 pulldown and deinterlacing in the same pass.
Same-codec re-muxes (e.g. VOB → FLV where both use H.264) produce nearly-identical sizes. Codec changes can swing the size dramatically: H.264 → H.265 typically halves the file at the same visual quality; H.264 → VP9 is roughly comparable.
MP4 / H.264 plays natively everywhere. MOV / H.264 plays on Apple devices and most Smart TVs but not on older Android. MKV needs VLC on iOS. The advanced options include a "device compatibility" preset that picks the safest codec / container combination for the target device.
It depends on the codec change. Same-codec re-mux: 30-60 seconds (no re-encode). Re-encode to a different codec: typically 0.3-0.7x source duration on our GPU pipeline, so a 1-hour file finishes in 18-40 minutes.
Up to 8K (7680×4320) on Premium. Free users are capped at 4K (3840×2160) per the file-size limit. HDR metadata (HDR10, Dolby Vision) is preserved where both VOB and FLV containers support it.
Yes — uploaded video files are processed in isolated workers and deleted within minutes of completion. We never view, store, retain, or share content. See /privacy/ for the full data retention window.
Not in the same step — use /video-trim/ or /video-cutter/ to trim before converting, then queue the VOB → FLV step. Trimming and converting in series is faster than re-encoding the whole file just to crop.
Almost always a bitrate-too-low setting. Re-encoding from a high-bitrate VOB into a lower-bitrate FLV at the default CRF compresses heavily on motion-heavy scenes. Push CRF down to 16-18 (or set explicit bitrate) and re-run to recover quality.
Yes — embedded subtitle tracks (mov_text in MP4, SRT/ASS in MKV) are preserved when both VOB and FLV containers support them. Burned-in (hardsub) subtitles transfer automatically because they are part of the video frame.

VOB

Ko te VOB (Hanga Ataata) he whakatakotoranga ipu mo te ataata DVD. Kei roto he ataata, ororongo, hauraro, me nga tahua mo te purei DVD.

FLV

FLV (Flash Video) Ko te hōputu ipu ataata whakawhanakehia e Adobe. Kei te whakamahia nuitia mo te roma ataata ipurangi me te tautoko e Adobe Flash Player.


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