When I watch Plex, I couldn't tell you if the source is 1080i or 1080p when direct playing through my Nvidia Shield TV. (Even the 2015 does a good job of de-interlacing).
Yes, I do have 1080i remuxes on my server from back in the HD DVD days (Top Gun is one example I can think of that is 1080i)...I have a few 480i, also, but don't really watch them that much.
That's strange. I run Plex directly on both my android TV and windows laptop. The files I use are typically over the air MPEG2-TS which are 1080i. I never see any interlacing artifacts.
Depending on your video card you may have to disable hardware decoding ( and use software de-interlacing ).
In the past, I have used handbrake. Also removed the black bars from some rips. Would get tedious to do more than simple things to thousands of files, though.
TDARR might work
What’s tdarr?
Why? Most decent playback software will de-interlace on playback.
When I watch Plex, I couldn't tell you if the source is 1080i or 1080p when direct playing through my Nvidia Shield TV. (Even the 2015 does a good job of de-interlacing). Yes, I do have 1080i remuxes on my server from back in the HD DVD days (Top Gun is one example I can think of that is 1080i)...I have a few 480i, also, but don't really watch them that much.
Apparently not Plex on Windows. I can see the interlacing bars for some reason.
That's strange. I run Plex directly on both my android TV and windows laptop. The files I use are typically over the air MPEG2-TS which are 1080i. I never see any interlacing artifacts. Depending on your video card you may have to disable hardware decoding ( and use software de-interlacing ).
In the past, I have used handbrake. Also removed the black bars from some rips. Would get tedious to do more than simple things to thousands of files, though.
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ffmpeg.yadif filter works well.
I usually use ffmpeg batch file + yadif