From 9f0b9d27345087d74efa1d912ca5d70430725d74 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Michael Fabian 'Xaymar' Dirks Date: Wed, 19 Jan 2022 23:26:00 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] guides: Set table size for NVENC streaming settings --- _guides/obs/high-quality-streaming/nvenc.html | 12 ++++++------ 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/_guides/obs/high-quality-streaming/nvenc.html b/_guides/obs/high-quality-streaming/nvenc.html index 4b6a8e4..ee15af9 100644 --- a/_guides/obs/high-quality-streaming/nvenc.html +++ b/_guides/obs/high-quality-streaming/nvenc.html @@ -19,9 +19,9 @@ StreamFX v0.11 and OBS Studio 27.0{% endcapture %}{% include blocks/paragraph.li {% capture content %}The built-in NVENC option in OBS Studio is by far the simplest option and will give you almost identical quality on Maxwell, Pascal, Turing and Ampere, though Turing and Ampere will make use of the new improvements of the NVENC chip. Maxwell and Pascal users can expect to reach x264 veryfast/faster-like quality, while Turing and Ampere users can expect to hit fast/medium-like quality. Below are the settings you need to set:{% endcapture %}{% include blocks/paragraph.liquid content=content %} {% capture content %} - Option - Kepler, Maxwell & Pascal - Turing & Ampere + Option + Kepler, Maxwell & Pascal + Turing & Ampere Preset @@ -54,9 +54,9 @@ StreamFX v0.11 and OBS Studio 27.0{% endcapture %}{% include blocks/paragraph.li {% capture content %}If you’re new to StreamFX’s NVENC integration, it will most likely overwhelm you with the settings it offers. But thanks to all those settings, you can actually go above the default quality by quite a significant amount. Note that I will only cover critical settings, as other settings like Bitrate, Buffer Size and Key Frame Interval are explained elsewhere. {% endcapture %}{% include blocks/paragraph.liquid content=content %} {% capture content %} - Option - Kepler, Maxwell & Pascal - Turing & Ampere + Option + Kepler, Maxwell & Pascal + Turing & Ampere Preset