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MakeMKV is the gold standard for ripping DVDs and Blurays. It produces files with an MKV extension out of any video files on the disc. MKV, like MP4 and AVI, is a not a video format, but a type of media container. Think of a media container like a bookshelf where you have shelves for video, audio, subtitles, and chapters.
1. Select Add Track and then click "Default" not Burn In. At this point the subtitles were embeded in the video and were a selectable option in VLC, and could be turned off and on. 2. Then after video was ripped, I used "My MP4BoxGUI". Used Demux and extracted the timed text. It provided the subtitles in .srt format.
Select Output Format. Click the Output Format on the right side. You can choose MP4 under the Video tab to convert DVD to MP4 or select AVI, MKV, MOV, H.264, etc. based on your needs. If you want to rip audio from DVD, go to the “Audio” tab and select the format you need.
Say I want to rip titles 0, 2 and 7 then I would expect a command something like this would be available. makemkvcon64 mkv disc:0 0,2,7 "\path\to\output\dir". Otherwise, if you just loop over each title separately then makemkvcon does a full disc rescan which is a big waste of time. The usage.txt file from the MakeMKV site shows how to rip a Step 1 - Rip your Blu-Ray Movie. Using MakeMKV, rip your Blu-Ray movie as you normally would. Make sure to place a check for the subtitles before you perform the rip. This probably will take a while, given the size of the format, as well as the general speed of your Blu-Ray drive, your hard drive, etc. Step 2 - Pull the Subtitles Out. IlomM.