Then why not come to the DVDranger forum and learn the software and how to set the settings for BD and the GPU and the Audio setting , You ask for help but in the wrong place, 11 systems they all must be screamers I have 9 plus 6 laptops from min to max requirements no way I can do 11 systems in 24 hrs and I am friggen good at what I do, since 1985 in the Pc biz making a living
so Adbear you need help stop the noise come and get it
I know exactly what I'm doing when building systems, I've been building video editing systems since 1998 and other systems for over 10 years before that, so I know how to set a system up for encoding etc. All these systems are clean installs with just Windows and the motherboard/hardware drivers on them if the software doesn't work on a clean system then it's not working properly at all. I have tried it with and without GPU acceleration, makes no difference. Tried on i5 & i7 Gen 1,2,3 & 4 as well as on old Core 2 quad (which took forever to encode)
I never said I made 11 systems in 1 day just that I had tested it on 11 different systems.(although as I have built 8 systems from base components and installed them in well under 17 hours in the past I see no reason why I couldn't make 11 in a 24 hour period) and no they aren't 'screamers'. When you work in a professional, well thought out and streamlined environment there's no reason why you can't build and install a system extremely quickly. (One thing I've noticed is that you are always quick to deride other peoples work which to me comes across as unprofessional).
All I'm doing here is stating facts that I've tested this software on multiple systems and so far haven't got 1 to work properly. They are all clean installs so I don't understand why it doesn't work as there shouldn't be anything on there to cause an issue. I've already asked if anyone else has tried it and got it to work.
I can make a Blu-ray output fine until I tick the 'CinEx' box after that the audio comes out so corrupted it's impossible to hear anything except pops and clicks.
I've already been through the manual, and tried the Cyberlink BD checker, although why this would make any difference I don't know as it just tells you if you system is able to play back Blu-rays which should make no difference for the encoding side and my systems can obviously play back Blu-rays otherwise I wouldn't be able to tell the difference between the originals and the CinEx versions.
Here's what I'm doing
I rip a film to harddrive with AnyDVD HD running (in this case 'Salt')
I then use the DVDRanger software to make a 'movie only' Blu-ray at DL Blu-ray size so it doesn't re-encode anything, I also remove all subtitles and all audio tracks except the English HD audio track. When that's finished I then load the new version into DVDRanger and run it through again as not only does it appear to not have removed all the audio tracks but actually added in extra ones that weren't there to begin with.
Once I've run it through a second time and now got a Movie only with just 1 HD audio track I then use the 'Video to Blu-ray ' option, choose the highest preset and tick the CinEx button, then tell it where to put the file and set it going