Wednesday, February 24, 2010

How to select subtitles and audio tracks while ripping Blu-ray movies (TrueHD is supported)

Because of copyright issues, BD owners are unable to copy or back up their Blu-ray movies in a free way, even their purchased ones. To meet people’s needs, a lot of Blu-ray rippers are developed. However, the thing is that most BD applications are unable to deal with Blu-ray subtitles and audio tracks in an available way. With luck, I’ve come across a practical program recently, which enables users to select whatever subtitles and audio tracks you need, and I suppose lots of people are looking forward to the functionality, so I would like to share its detailed steps here, hope it helps.

The software I found is Pavtube Blu-Ray Ripper, which is an independent and professional utility to rip both Blu-ray discs and general DVDs to our wanted HD or SD media formats. With full Blu-ray disc support, it is able to remove copyright protections of our BD disc, no matter BD+, or AACS, even MKB Version > 10 is supported as well. With advanced audio technology, it is capable of reading all audio tracks of a BD disc, including Dolby TureHD Audio and DTS-HD Master Audio, which will never let you miss the mother tongue of the movie. Best of all, it allows users selecting subtitles to convert, and this is the feature that lots of similar software lacked.

Well, let’s to see the whole process of how to select subtitles and audio tracks while ripping Blu-ray movies via this program.WAF converter supports more than 20 well known formats.

Step 1: Click "DVD Rom", "DVD Folder" or "IFO/ISO" to load Blu-ray files

By the way, there are a number of .m2ts files imported, and usually, the one with the longest duration is the main movie.



Step 2: Select your wanted subtitle to convert

Click on the pull down menu of "Subtitle", then all the subtitles in the BD movie will be listed out, including language and subtitle ID, you can select one according to your own needs.



Step 3: Select your wanted audio track to convert

Click the drop-down list of "Audio", and then all the info about audio tracks are shown clearly, including language, audio codec(turehd is supported as well), stream ID, and audio channel, you can choose whatever you like to do conversion.



Step 4: Select output format and set destination folder

Click the pull down list of "Format" to select your needed output format, there are a wide range of options, here I choose "MPEG-TS HD Video (*.ts) for instance.



Meanwhile, you can click the folder icon at the opposite side of "Output" to specify where to locate the output files.

Step 5: Set advanced settings

Click "Settings’ button, then you will be able to adjust audio and video parameters in the following interface, including codec, aspect ratio, bit rate, frame rate, sample rate, and audio channel.



Step 6: Click "Convert" button to start Blu-ray ripping.

Once completed, you can find out the resulted files via clicking "Open" button effortlessly. Of course, these files are including the subtitle and audio track you have selected before conversion.

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