Fast-forward to the end of 2019, and I had a 6K 360° edit that was so information-dense, it needed to upscale to 8K for delivery: I could find no way to create a 6K MP4 the same or smaller size than an 8K MP4 with the same PQ. However, I left a large opportunity for datarate savings on the table — I didn’t have time to find a perceptually transparent temporal noise filter.
As we move into an era of reliance on upscaling and ML reconstruction, we need to preserve a lot of the "noise" texture that was in the lower resolution formats. It’s the same gotcha we had when moving from perfect analogue -> typical digital.
Jumping straight to the conclusions, here's what I learned:
- HQDN3D has easy settings but is probably never going to be as useful as NLMeans.
- NLMeans luma (y-settings) will always alter the feel. This is why the ‘Grain’ presets are all zero:
Even a super-low strength of 1 or 2 will remove detail. Trust the HandBrake presets. - NLMeans’s prefilter mean,median will give bitrate reduction of 2%,1% each, PQ neutral.
They will also increase processing overhead by orders of magnitude. - NLMeans’s Grain (Strong) preset will give bitrate reduction of 9%, PQ neutral.
- x265’s Grain tuning will give bitrate reduction of 40%, PQ neutral.
RF 18 on None Tuning can preserve as much detail as RF 28 on Grain Tuning. - x265 knows how to NR — don't overlook your friendly neighbourhood encoder!
When experimenting with NR filters, you can find better results, or quicker results, or both. - x265’s best quality 🤯 comes with ‘Slow’. ‘Slower’ and ‘Very Slow’ are 6%-8% larger files.
x264’s best quality 😏 comes with ‘Very Slow’, not ‘Placebo’. The clue is in the name.
Trust the Handbrake presets. - RF28 to RF18 are as far as you want to go. Target bitrates only if you’re forced to.
Trust the Handbrake advice.
Extreme Noise Reduction: fixing a bad mess
Here is the 2014 project, with NLMeans settings at — 10 : 0.15 : 9 : 3 : 30 : 0 — that's a sextuple:
I had also used 10 : 1 : 7 : 3 : 30 : 0 for a while but it did not clean up the large noise in the close-up as effectively. The origin-tune and patch-size were the two settings that made the difference.
3DNR too far: not for studio quality sources
Flash forward to 2021 and I am converting some S-VHS tapes to 1080p and even HDR. The breakthroughs have come in good consumer-grade sampling and upsamping, but the industry’s fascination with temporal noise reduction may have come in a decade where LCDs have lowered our expectations in temporal resolution: I was able to turn off my JVC’s DigiPure 3DNR once I found the menu in S-Video, but the Ocean Matrix S-Video to HDMI upscaler has no settings at all.
I’ve since replaced it with a more configurable Magewell (despite it not always locking on to field dominance) and here's why:
Ocean Matrix, as recommended by @techconnectify … probably fine for 24fps content? |
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