![]() ![]() Most shows I watch are at this point, but not all. So it is best to confirm that your show is being released in x265 beforehand. ![]() The profile will ONLY find x265 releases and will ignore x264 completely. The only catch is that it doesn’t really work the way you are looking for it to work. I would also mention that in my experience, nobody puts my shows up on Usenet in x265, only on the torrent sites so I also changed my Usenet/Torrent delay preferences accordingly for that profile. I have had the best results with Must Contain x265 OR h265 OR HEVC, which I believe covers all the different ways that the uploaders say the same thing. subzero79 above is on the right track but in my experience some releases are named differently. My way of addressing it is to have an “x265” profile that I use for some of my shows. A belated thanks!) What I was thinking (and what I think you meant) is to prioritize an x265 release (of any kind WEBDL, HDTV, etc.) over an x264 release. Examples: movies, tv, series, music, etc. (Tangentially, I don’t think I thanked markus101 for the quick response he gave me on the issue. Sonarr will send a download request to your client, and associate it with a label or category name that you have configured in the download client settings. 2 days later it found a x264 WEBDL-720p rip which was 1.1GB and it upgraded the file, turned out it was worse quality - so I got a lower quality rip and almost triple of my disk space consumed. I think I understand what you mean though, as I asked about a similar scenario a few months back and got the same answer. For instance the other day Sonarr downloaded an x265 HDTV-1080p rip which was amazing quality and only 400MB. I would point out that you are kind of mixing and matching what you are looking for with that example. ![]()
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