How to Use MyFFVideoConverter — Step-by-Step Guide for Beginners

How to Use MyFFVideoConverter — Step-by-Step Guide for Beginners

Overview

MyFFVideoConverter is a simple GUI wrapper around FFmpeg that helps beginners convert videos between formats, trim clips, and adjust basic settings without using command-line tools.

Before you start

  • Download: Install the latest MyFFVideoConverter for your OS from the official site or trusted source.
  • Install FFmpeg: Ensure FFmpeg is installed and accessible (MyFFVideoConverter may bundle it or ask for its path).
  • Back up files: Keep originals in case you need to revert.

Step-by-step guide

  1. Install and open the app

    • Run the installer and launch MyFFVideoConverter.
  2. Add source files

    • Click Add or drag-and-drop video files into the input list.
  3. Choose output format

    • Select a preset (MP4, MKV, AVI, WebM) or pick a codec (H.264/H.265, VP9) from the format menu.
  4. Configure basic settings

    • Resolution: Pick a target resolution (keep aspect ratio).
    • Frame rate: Choose same as source or a standard value (24/30/60).
    • Bitrate/Quality: Use presets like “High,” “Medium,” or set a bitrate (e.g., 2500–5000 kbps for 1080p).
  5. Advanced options (optional)

    • Audio codec/bitrate: AAC 128–256 kbps typical.
    • Subtitles: Add or embed subtitle files (SRT).
    • Filters: Crop, rotate, or apply simple filters if available.
  6. Trim or clip (optional)

    • Set start/end times or use the preview timeline to select a segment.
  7. Choose output folder and filename

    • Set destination and optional filename pattern for batch jobs.
  8. Start conversion

    • Click Convert or Start. Monitor progress and logs for errors.
  9. Verify output

    • Play converted files to confirm video/audio sync and quality.

Tips for best results

  • For compatibility, choose MP4 (H.264 + AAC).
  • Use H.265/HEVC for smaller files but ensure target devices support it.
  • Keep source resolution to avoid upscaling.
  • For fast conversions on supported hardware, enable hardware acceleration (NVENC, Quick Sync).

Troubleshooting

  • If conversion fails, check FFmpeg path, update FFmpeg, and examine error log.
  • Poor audio/video sync: try re-muxing (copy codecs) or re-encode both tracks.
  • Unsupported codecs: convert audio or video track to a widely supported codec.

Quick presets (recommended)

Use case Format/Codec Settings
General playback MP4 / H.264 + AAC 1080p, 3000 kbps, 30 fps
Small files WebM / VP9 + Opus 720p, 1500 kbps
High quality MKV / H.265 + FLAC 4K, 10–20 Mbps

If you want, I can produce a tailored one-page quick-reference for a specific OS, device, or output target.

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