Bloat 480p -

Remux from AVI or older containers to MP4 or MKV, discarding obsolete index data.

For 480p, a reasonable average bitrate is 0.8–1.5 Mbps for H.264, or 0.5–1.0 Mbps for H.265. Any file exceeding 2.5 Mbps for 480p should be considered bloated unless it contains high-motion content. bloat 480p

[Generated AI] Date: April 14, 2026

The Persistence of Bloat: Analyzing the Inefficiencies of the 480p Standard in a High-Definition Ecosystem Remux from AVI or older containers to MP4

Re-encoding legacy 480p content to H.264 or H.265 using VBR and appropriate quality settings (e.g., CRF 22–24) can reduce file size by 70–90% with no visible loss. [Generated AI] Date: April 14, 2026 The Persistence

480p files frequently contain multiple audio tracks (e.g., Dolby Digital 5.1, stereo, commentary) and subtitles in bitmap formats (e.g., VobSub). Each uncompressed audio track can add 300–400 Mbps. For a resolution that is often viewed on small screens or with basic speakers, these additional streams constitute significant bloat.

Early streaming and archiving often used CBR to ensure compatibility. A 480p video encoded at 2.5 Mbps CBR will have a massive file size, even during static scenes that require far less data. Variable Bitrate (VBR) encoding could reduce size by 40–60% without quality loss. The failure to use VBR in legacy 480p files is a primary source of bloat.