AVC Hd Video to MATROSKA Video conversion is the process of taking video files in the MTS container—commonly created by AVCHD cameras using H.264/AVC video—and repackaging or transcoding them into the MKV (Matroska) container, which supports flexible codecs, subtitles, chapters, and metadata. This conversion preserves high-definition AVC video while adding Matroska’s advanced features for playback compatibility, streaming, and archival use.
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Read guide →Drag your .MTS file from your computer or use the browse function.
Confirm .mkv as the selected destination format.
Click "Convert" and download your converted .MKV file once ready.
MTS files typically use the video/mp2t MIME type and are encoded with AVC/H.264 codecs, mainly for high-definition recording. MKV files use the video/x-matroska MIME type and can contain multiple video, audio, and subtitle streams encoded with various codecs like H.264, H.265, or VP9. MKV is favored for streaming, archiving, and playback across different platforms.
The MATROSKA Video (.MKV) format is commonly used for video. Understanding its characteristics can be helpful when converting to or from other formats like AVC Hd Video.
While specific technical details aren't available here, MATROSKA Video files generally serve the purpose of storing video effectively within their domain.
Easily convert your AVC Hd Video files in MTS format to the flexible MATROSKA Video MKV format using our online MTS to MKV converter. No software installation is required, and the process is fast and secure. Whether you need better compatibility or smaller file sizes, our tool simplifies video conversion for all users.
AVC Hd Video (MTS) is a high-definition video format commonly used in camcorders, often larger in size and less flexible. MATROSKA Video (MKV) is a versatile container supporting various codecs and advanced features like multiple subtitles and audio tracks. While MTS focuses on recording quality, MKV emphasizes playback compatibility and feature richness.
Keep original quality: use remux (no re-encode) when the target devices support H.264 inside MKV to avoid quality loss and speed up conversion.
Optimal file sizes: 1080p AVC MTS files typically range 200MB–3GB per hour depending on camera bitrate; transcode with CRF 18–22 for near-original quality or raise CRF to 23–28 to reduce size.
Batch conversions: convert multiple MTS files by remuxing them individually or concatenate MTS streams before remuxing when continuous playback is needed; use queueing to preserve CPU resources.
Format-specific limits: MTS/AVCHD often uses interlaced 1080i—deinterlace if target playback devices expect progressive frames to avoid combing artifacts.
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Preservation tip: always keep a copy of the original MTS if you plan lossy re-encoding, and match audio sample rates (48 kHz common in cameras) when transcoding.