Record fill-ups for all your cars and monitor your car’s efficiency.
Need to track business mileage? Just start auto trip and we will track all your trips in the background whenever you are on the move. rarbg x265 encoding settings better
Don’t lose sight of your maintenance and services. Log your services and we will remind you when its due. --bitrate 3000 (Struggles during action scenes)
Know your vehicle's running costs and plan for your expenses. Unlock --aq-mode 4 RARBG typically used --aq-mode 2
Sign into the cloud and get easy access to all your data from anywhere and any device.
Run your reports or schedule them weekly or monthly to know more about your fill-ups , mileage and expenses.
--bitrate 3000 (Struggles during action scenes). Better way: --crf 18 --vbv-bufsize 30000 --vbv-maxrate 35000 (Gives low complexity scenes 18, action scenes up to 35Mbps). 2. Unlock --aq-mode 4 RARBG typically used --aq-mode 2 (Auto-variance). The new standard is --aq-mode 4 (Auto-variance with bias to dark scenes). This prevents the "crushing blacks" seen in old RARBG releases. 3. Upgrade --no-sao to --limit-sao Simply turning SAO off ( --no-sao ) saves texture but creates visual "popping" artifacts. Better: Use --limit-sao with --sao-non-hevc . This keeps SAO only where absolutely necessary, preventing the blurry "plastic" look while avoiding temporal flicker. 4. Finer Grain Control: --nr-intra & --nr-inter RARBG releases sometimes had too much noise. To beat them, use light noise reduction only on the encoder's motion estimation:
For nearly two decades, RARBG was the gold standard for high-quality video encodes. Its infamous "RARBG" tag at the beginning of movies wasn't just a logo; it was a stamp of technical excellence. Even though the site is no longer active, the legacy of their encoding profile lives on. Torrent indexes are still flooded with "RARBG" releases, and users constantly ask: How did they make their x265 files look so good at such small sizes?
If you are archiving, add --hdr10-opt --chromaloc 2 for HDR content. RARBG rarely used these, and they are the final frontier for "better."
--bitrate 3000 (Struggles during action scenes). Better way: --crf 18 --vbv-bufsize 30000 --vbv-maxrate 35000 (Gives low complexity scenes 18, action scenes up to 35Mbps). 2. Unlock --aq-mode 4 RARBG typically used --aq-mode 2 (Auto-variance). The new standard is --aq-mode 4 (Auto-variance with bias to dark scenes). This prevents the "crushing blacks" seen in old RARBG releases. 3. Upgrade --no-sao to --limit-sao Simply turning SAO off ( --no-sao ) saves texture but creates visual "popping" artifacts. Better: Use --limit-sao with --sao-non-hevc . This keeps SAO only where absolutely necessary, preventing the blurry "plastic" look while avoiding temporal flicker. 4. Finer Grain Control: --nr-intra & --nr-inter RARBG releases sometimes had too much noise. To beat them, use light noise reduction only on the encoder's motion estimation:
For nearly two decades, RARBG was the gold standard for high-quality video encodes. Its infamous "RARBG" tag at the beginning of movies wasn't just a logo; it was a stamp of technical excellence. Even though the site is no longer active, the legacy of their encoding profile lives on. Torrent indexes are still flooded with "RARBG" releases, and users constantly ask: How did they make their x265 files look so good at such small sizes?
If you are archiving, add --hdr10-opt --chromaloc 2 for HDR content. RARBG rarely used these, and they are the final frontier for "better."
Simply Fleet is a simple and affordable software to help you track, monitor and analyse your fleet’s operations.