For Blu-ray Discs
What You Need
Just as ripping a DVD is a step up from ripping a CD, ripping a Blu-ray cranks difficulty up another notch from DVDs. While many of the principles remain the same, the sheer amount of data to be processed (remember that dual-layer Blu-ray discs can contain up to 50GB, compared to 8.5GB for dual-layer DVDs) makes the process more time consuming. Without as long a history, the software for doing the task also remains less developed and more expensive.
Besides a Blu-ray burner and BD-R discs, you’ll need a number of software components to turn raw, copy-protected Blu-ray data into the type of video you might stream over a home network or compress and put on an iPhone. Since the most complex part of the equation will be decrypting the complex algorithms used to protect Blu-ray content, you’ll need to drop some money to do it. AnyDVD HD is currently the best way to bypass Blu-ray encryption, which will cost you $80 unless you take advantage of the 21-day trial. After that, you’ll also need RipBot264, the avisynth and ffdshow codec packs, Haali media splitter, and Microsoft’s .NET Framework 2.0, all of which can be downloaded for free.
Step 1: Break the copy protection.
Pop any given movie disc in your drive, and you’ll be able to play it from the disc, but not drag the actual files off the disc to the computer. That’s because of AACS copy protection, which we need to break.
Install all of the above software, then run AnyDVD HD. Bam, consider a copy protection subverted. Aren’t you glad you spent that $80?
Step 2: Rip the Blu-ray files.
A little Fox icon will appear in your system tray. Right click on it, then choose “Rip Video DVD to Harddisk.” Choose a drive with plenty of room available, because you’ll be pulling over the bit-for-bit Blu-ray files with no additional compression, meaning they could easily take up 40GB. Click “Copy DVD” when you’re done and sit back: This will take a while. Some guides advise you to skip this step by compressing video right as it comes off the disk to your hard drive, but a hiccup in the process can easily ruin the entire process and force you to start over. We recommend this method for the best reliability.
To confirm that it worked, go inspect the folder you ripped it to. Look under BDMV\STREAMS. There will be multiple video files, but you want the largest one. Double click it to ensure it plays in a reputable media player like VLC, which will confirm your rip went smoothly.
















Showing 25 comments
RSSshare you a cool blu-ray to iphone converter
http://www.rip-blu-ray.biz
http://apcmag.com/how_to_play_ripped_dvds_on_vi...
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