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The BD9 includes English SDH. No bonus features (typical for a single-episode encode), but chapter markers are placed every ~5 minutes, which helps for scene-searching. 🆚 BD9 vs. Other Versions | Format | File size | Pros | Cons | |--------|-----------|------|------| | BD9 (this release) | ~6.8 GB | Great PQ/AQ, burnable to DVD-9, smaller than full BD | Not original disc quality | | WEB-DL 1080p (ITVX/Amazon) | ~3-4 GB | Smaller, immediate | Lower bitrate, blocky in dark scenes | | Full Blu-ray (retail) | ~20 GB | Lossless video/audio | Overkill for a 45-min episode |
It looks like you're asking for a long-form post about — likely referring to the first episode of Season 4 of the British ITV drama The Bay , specifically in BD9 format (a 1080p Blu-ray encoded file, often smaller than standard BD25/BD50 but still high quality, commonly found in fan releases). the bay s04e01 bd9
In the enthusiast world, BD9 refers to a 1920x1080 encode that fits onto a DVD-9 (7.95GB) or is distributed as an MKV/MP4 file with similar specs. It’s not a retail Blu-ray (which would be BD25 or BD50), but a re-encode designed to preserve excellent detail while being shareable or burnable. For TV episodes, it’s often the sweet spot between a 500MB webrip and a massive 15GB REMUX. The BD9 includes English SDH
For archiving or home theater viewing, the BD9 is the practical winner. Marsha Thomason continues to ground the show. Jenn isn’t a super-cop; she’s tired, occasionally wrong, but fiercely empathetic. Her scene opposite newcomer Emmy Rose (as Leah Woods) in the second act – where Jenn gently pushes for information while Leah’s grief turns to anger – is the episode’s acting highlight. Other Versions | Format | File size |