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I've done enough reading to know that 704x480 is the closest NTSC 16x9 video size for DVD video, and 720x480 is actually a little wider than 16x9. The question I have is: what's the difference between adding 8px borders (nominal analogue blanking) onto 704x480 video to make it 720x480 and putting that on DVD (which seems to be the way most commercial DVDs with correct aspect ratios use), and simply encoding a 704x480 video and putting that directly on DVD without modification?
The problem I'm encountering is that adding black borders and then putting it in a 720x480 frame results in digital players (software players, Blu-ray players) incorrectly assuming the black bars are part of the 16x9 image and displaying them, resulting in a displayed image that is slightly too narrow horizontally. Analogue DVD players are fine and discard the borders, as they should.
I'm just looking for a way to have an image that displays correctly on digital players without screwing up analogue players. Directly encoding 704x480 seems like it might work, but am I overlooking something?
And let's pretend I just don't care about overscan on the output device. We're only talking about nominal analogue blanking, that's it.