Where is a quality DVD Ripper? Where?!?
tl;dr Is there a DVD ripping software that allows for Widescreen rips with no loss in quality or resoltion?
Long Version; Ever since getting digital cable with a DVR I've been thinking of putting my entire DVD collection onto a computer, hooking it up to my TV, and having all of my movies accessible with a few clicks instead of hunting through my rather large racks of mostly terrible b-movies that take a special kind of nerd to love. With the purchase of a new desktop, I've decided that this is just the time, and the plan is to rip each DVD and whatever special features I'd like to keep onto my old computer's HDD and connect it to my nice big widescreen. I started with with a few movies, tested everything out, and it's all going perfectly until tonight.
I've hit a snag. I can't find a single DVD ripper that will copy the DVD into a widescreen format without downscaling it. I haven't gotten very far into the widescreen movies yet (see: stuck on number 1), but the native resolution is around 850x480 for the non HD movies. The max resolution I can get is about 720*480. I've downloaded several free trials and they all work great for 4:3 resolution types, but the 16:9 is out the window apparently. The full versions don't allow for it either, I've made sure.
I haven't even gotten to my HD collection yet, so I'm sure that will be just as annoying, but until then, I'm stuck here. Does anyone know of software that lets me rip movies in their actual resolution, that keeps (or sharpens) the video and sound quality, that doens't look audio sync? My demands may seem high, but to me they seem standard and what everyone should be looking for.I'm not asking for free software, I'm more than willing to pay a reasonable price for something that works as I expect it to. I'd prefer a free trial though so I can test it's features.
I should note that I'm looking to just burn the movies, not an image copy of the DVD's to be played on a virtual drive. That's plan B, but much more costly (in Gb space) so will be saved as the backup plan. I'm also not looking at workarounds or other tricks unless they result in zero loss in quality. I don't mind a movie looking bad on the TV if it looked bad from DVD, but if it looks different (and I'm anal about it) it's worthless. I didn't think this would be so difficult of a project, but that's what I get for thinking.
