![]() If that works, you might be able to return to h264_qsv and get your hardware speed back. That’s a hack, but I’m not sure why else the original libx264 settings aren’t doing any better. Or, you could try adding a Sharpen filter greater than 30% to emphasize the sharpness you want (maybe even overshoot) then maybe the export will dull it down to where you want it. There is the option of preset=slow on the Other tab, but that usually isn’t necessary (and the extra processing actually is slow). I guess you could crank the quality percent even higher on libx264 and see what happens. We’re back to settings for the export format. So, we’ve learned that processing isn’t to blame. But it wouldn’t impact the sharpness of a frame it would just put a sharp frame in the “wrong” slot. If the source video format is variable frame rate or some other format that isn’t seek friendly, then frame sync can become an issue. It’s just comparing “frame 50” to “frame 50” might be an unfair comparison if frame sync causes one of them to actually be “frame 52”. If it is a frame sync problem, then the two videos would look equally sharp overall when played back at normal speed.
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