How to Use Pavtube BDMagic to Rip Blu-ray and DVD to MP4 Quickly

Convert Blu-rays for Plex with Pavtube BDMagic — Step-by-Step Guide

Overview

This guide shows a practical workflow to rip Blu-ray discs with Pavtube BDMagic and prepare the files for smooth Plex streaming. Assumptions: you have a Blu-ray drive, Pavtube BDMagic installed, and Plex Media Server set up on your target device (NAS, PC, etc.). Outputs will be compatible with most Plex clients (MP4/H.264 or H.265 with AC3/AAC audio).

Step 1 — Insert disc and launch BDMagic

  1. Insert the Blu-ray disc into your drive.
  2. Open Pavtube BDMagic. The program will scan the disc; wait until the main movie title appears in the source list.

Step 2 — Choose the correct title and audio/subtitle tracks

  1. Click the dropdown beside the disc name and select the longest/main movie title (usually the largest file).
  2. Use the track selection area to pick preferred audio (e.g., English DTS/AC3) and subtitle tracks. For Plex, keep a primary audio track and include subtitles only if you need burned-in captions or want separate subtitle files.

Step 3 — Select an output format suitable for Plex

  1. Click Format.
  2. Recommended choices:
    • MP4 (H.264 + AAC/AC3) — best compatibility across Plex clients. Choose “Common Video > H.264 MP4” or a preconfigured “Plex” profile if available.
    • MKV (H.265/HEVC) — smaller files with similar quality; use if your Plex clients support HEVC.
  3. If preserving multiple audio tracks and lossless menus is important, choose MKV, but note some Plex clients prefer MP4.

Step 4 — Adjust video/audio settings (optional but recommended)

  1. Click Settings to open encoding options.
  2. Video:
    • Encoder: H.264 (x264) for widest compatibility; H.265 (x265) for smaller files.
    • Bitrate: 8,000–15,000 kbps for 1080p good-quality copies; reduce for smaller files. Or use Constant Quality/CRF: ~18–22 for H.264.
    • Frame rate: Same as source.
  3. Audio:
    • Codec: AAC or AC3 passthrough if you want surround audio preserved.
    • Bitrate: 192–384 kbps for AAC; keep original for AC3 if passthrough.
  4. Subtitle: choose “Burn-in” if you need forced subtitles always visible; otherwise leave as soft subtitles.

Step 5 — (Optional) Crop/Trim or Add Filters

Use the Edit button to remove black bars (Auto Crop), trim unwanted segments, or apply deinterlacing if needed. For Plex, avoid heavy filters that re-encode unnecessarily.

Step 6 — Start conversion

  1. Choose an output folder.
  2. Click Convert. Encoding time depends on CPU, selected codec, and disc length. Monitor for errors.

Step 7 — Verify output and add to Plex library

  1. After conversion, check the file with a local player (VLC) to confirm video, audio, and subtitle behavior.
  2. Transfer the file to your Plex media folder or the device where Plex Server reads movies. Organize using Plex naming conventions (e.g., /Movies/Movie Name (Year)/Movie Name (Year).ext).
  3. Open Plex Media Server and refresh or scan the library so the new movie is detected.

Troubleshooting tips

  • No audio/subtitle: re-rip selecting the correct source track or enable audio passthrough.
  • Stuttering on client: lower bitrate or switch to H.264 if client has limited HEVC support.
  • File too large: increase CRF (lower quality) or switch to H.265 if client supports it.

Quick recommended presets

  • Best compatibility: H.264 MP4 — 1080p, H.264, 10,000 kbps, AAC 256 kbps.
  • Best size/quality balance: H.265 MKV — CRF 20, AAC/AC3 passthrough.
  • Preserve multi-audio: MKV with original audio tracks passthrough.

Follow these steps to create Plex-friendly rips from Blu-rays using Pavtube BDMagic.

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