F5F Stay Refreshed Software General Software Do you know anyone who can share YouTube-quality content?

Do you know anyone who can share YouTube-quality content?

Do you know anyone who can share YouTube-quality content?

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Reepety
Senior Member
374
09-20-2016, 10:43 AM
#1
I have been working on resolving this problem for more than three years. I have enabled VP09 on my videos and export them in 2560x1440 at VBR 2, with a bitrate ranging from 270 to 300 bits per second. I have tested various bitrates (50, 60, 70, 100, 150 ETC) but the results remain consistent. I have also used maximum render quality and checked maximum depth, opting for H.264 at 60fps. I tried CBR and VBR but they often appear blurry when I move around. If you encounter similar issues with YouTube, especially when moving in games, the videos become pixelated. The original export is crystal clear regardless of movement, but once posted to YouTube while active, it becomes blurry. Any suggestions on how to fix this or adjust Premiere Pro settings? I’ve invested a lot of time—over a few hundred hours—trying to solve this and am now very exhausted.
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Reepety
09-20-2016, 10:43 AM #1

I have been working on resolving this problem for more than three years. I have enabled VP09 on my videos and export them in 2560x1440 at VBR 2, with a bitrate ranging from 270 to 300 bits per second. I have tested various bitrates (50, 60, 70, 100, 150 ETC) but the results remain consistent. I have also used maximum render quality and checked maximum depth, opting for H.264 at 60fps. I tried CBR and VBR but they often appear blurry when I move around. If you encounter similar issues with YouTube, especially when moving in games, the videos become pixelated. The original export is crystal clear regardless of movement, but once posted to YouTube while active, it becomes blurry. Any suggestions on how to fix this or adjust Premiere Pro settings? I’ve invested a lot of time—over a few hundred hours—trying to solve this and am now very exhausted.

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CaptKrazy
Member
234
10-07-2016, 02:36 AM
#2
what do you mean by 270-300 bitrate? bitrate is in bits for 1440p @ 60Hz 30-60Mbit VBR should be plenty enough
there is a chance that your ISP (internet provider) reduces bandwith on youtube, thus giving you lower video resolution
can you post some link to your vid?
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CaptKrazy
10-07-2016, 02:36 AM #2

what do you mean by 270-300 bitrate? bitrate is in bits for 1440p @ 60Hz 30-60Mbit VBR should be plenty enough
there is a chance that your ISP (internet provider) reduces bandwith on youtube, thus giving you lower video resolution
can you post some link to your vid?

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Raires
Junior Member
37
10-08-2016, 11:21 PM
#3
I viewed your stalker video at 1440x60p and it seemed okay to me. To help us identify the issue, please note exact time points in specific videos. For video editing, it’s best to render at the same image size and frame rate as the original to prevent artifacts from resizing or changing fps. I suggest using constant bit rates. Typically, I recommend a minimum of 10 times the frame height—so around 14,400 for your frame size. You should choose the bit rate that YouTube suggests for uploads. Also, remove the sheet you’re using as a backdrop and use a real green screen from Amazon.
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Raires
10-08-2016, 11:21 PM #3

I viewed your stalker video at 1440x60p and it seemed okay to me. To help us identify the issue, please note exact time points in specific videos. For video editing, it’s best to render at the same image size and frame rate as the original to prevent artifacts from resizing or changing fps. I suggest using constant bit rates. Typically, I recommend a minimum of 10 times the frame height—so around 14,400 for your frame size. You should choose the bit rate that YouTube suggests for uploads. Also, remove the sheet you’re using as a backdrop and use a real green screen from Amazon.

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ThePonyQueen
Member
131
10-14-2016, 01:08 PM
#4
youtube suggests 15Mbit for 1440p at 30fps, doubling that for 60fps would be problematic.
in moments with little action, this consumes unnecessary storage space, but applying 2pass vbr on scenes with sufficient bitrate shouldn't cause problems.
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ThePonyQueen
10-14-2016, 01:08 PM #4

youtube suggests 15Mbit for 1440p at 30fps, doubling that for 60fps would be problematic.
in moments with little action, this consumes unnecessary storage space, but applying 2pass vbr on scenes with sufficient bitrate shouldn't cause problems.

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muffles45
Member
189
10-17-2016, 12:29 PM
#5
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oEXFJFdvKAk
16:10 serves as a clear illustration of how my videos can appear pixelated during movement, whereas they remain sharp when stationary. The creators I follow rarely experience this problem. Of course, I should note this but please avoid watching on a phone—it makes any YouTube video look like 8K, haha.
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muffles45
10-17-2016, 12:29 PM #5

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oEXFJFdvKAk
16:10 serves as a clear illustration of how my videos can appear pixelated during movement, whereas they remain sharp when stationary. The creators I follow rarely experience this problem. Of course, I should note this but please avoid watching on a phone—it makes any YouTube video look like 8K, haha.

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godfreydtm
Member
214
10-19-2016, 11:28 AM
#6
I examined it using YouTube's 1440p60 signal on my 28" 4K QLED monitor. The blurring in the tops of some distant greenery seems noticeable, but without the design specifications for that area I can't confirm if it's important. To be accurate, you'd need to start from the beginning—reviewing the screen capture settings, quality and bitrate choices, etc.—so your capture aligns as closely as possible with YouTube's guidelines.
When editing videos, what adjustments are you making beyond adding the webcam feed? In most cases, the simplest approach to improve results is just fine-tuning those changes, as excessive edits can introduce unwanted artifacts.
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godfreydtm
10-19-2016, 11:28 AM #6

I examined it using YouTube's 1440p60 signal on my 28" 4K QLED monitor. The blurring in the tops of some distant greenery seems noticeable, but without the design specifications for that area I can't confirm if it's important. To be accurate, you'd need to start from the beginning—reviewing the screen capture settings, quality and bitrate choices, etc.—so your capture aligns as closely as possible with YouTube's guidelines.
When editing videos, what adjustments are you making beyond adding the webcam feed? In most cases, the simplest approach to improve results is just fine-tuning those changes, as excessive edits can introduce unwanted artifacts.