Step 3: Start Ripping!
Now that you’ve configured Handbrake just the way you’d like, save your custom preset by clicking the Add button at the bottom of the preset menu and assigning it a unique name. When you’re ready to start ripping, click the Start button at the top of the screen and treat yourself to a frosty beverage while the program does its thing (our rig transcoded the movie, which runs for two hours and 35 minutes, in just under two hours). A small DOS-style window will pop up to give you very basic feedback about what the program is doing and how much of its encoding task has been accomplished.

HandBrake during a DVD rip
When the program is finished, play the resulting file in your media player of choice to make sure you’re satisfied with how things came out. If you have a lot of DVDs you’d like to rip all at once, take advantage of Handbrake’s batch-processing feature and transcode them automatically and sequentially. Use AnyDVD or a similar program to copy each disc’s VIDEO_TS file to your computer’s hard drive (or to your server or NAS box). These will be very large files, obviously, so take care that you don’t fill your drive beyond its capacity (a too-full hard drive can have a significant negative impact on your PC’s performance).
Transcoding videos is extremely resource intensive—our session pegged both our CPU’s cores at 100 percent utilization—so it’s best to do this when you won’t otherwise need to use your machine; consider doing it overnight or before you leave for work. Once you’ve gathered up a bunch of movies, launch Handbrake, click the Source button, browse to the folder containing your VIDEO_TS files, and select the first one in the directory. But instead of clicking the Start button to being transcoding, click the Add to Queue button. Repeat this step for each movie you want to transcode, make sure your presets are configured to your specifications, and click the Start button.
Now that you’ve transferred your movies from DVD to hard disk, you can transcodes them to other formats and resolutions for playing on various handheld digital media players; stream them from a media server or always-on PC to a gaming console, media center extender, or similar device in another room in your home; and so on. If you bought and paid for the movie, you should be able to do anything you want with it – short of sharing the file with other folks, of course. After all, you don’t want to become a real outlaw.

Boogie Nights
















Showing 25 comments
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I use this one, you can check it out,
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You can find this Blu-ray Ripper here: http://www.pavtube.com/blu-ray-ripper
AnyDVD HD is good at removing all sorts of BD protections, but when it comes to file size compression, it can not do anything about it. What a pity!
You can find this Blu-ray Ripper here: http://www.pavtube.com/blu-ray-ripper
AnyDVD HD is good at removing all sorts of BD protections, but when it comes to file size compression, it can not do anything about it. What a pity