Watching strictly on a 1080p screen, even if somewhat larger, re-compressing Blu-rays to 10-15 gb always seemed visually lossless to me.
I still don't do it, since I have plenty space left and re-encoding at proper quality settings takes easily 3-5x the runtime of the movie, but I never managed to see a quality difference on that screen - and just judging from the bitrates allowed for that file size, its plenty to encode really high-quality streams. Its far above the bitrates the so called "scene" uses for its releases, or any online streaming services would ever use.
Well it has always stood out to me. I was surprised when I bought the Surface Pro 2, just how much better watching real Blu-ray looked on that display instead of the encodes I had made for my iPad. (which were about 15GB in size)
It's funny, because at normal "television" sizes these things are often not that apparent, but when you shrink it down to tablet size, due to the sheer sharpness of a display like that, it stands out more than you would think.
And of course, if you have, or plan to use a projector, the differences can be quite obvious there.
I've always found re-encoded formats that appear to be "visually lossless" on a television can start showing their flaws when you move to a larger display or a higher resolution one and are having to upscale.
Unless you can squeeze a 1000 disc changer into comfortable size and make it easy to use, I doubt it.
My movie collection is at around 300 Blu-rays to date, at only 7 TB of space - thats an average of nearly 25gb per movie, which means roughly 40-45 movies per Terabyte - or with 4TB disks, 160-180 movies per disk. Much easier to run 4 of those disks than a huge clunky changer with spotty support.
Sony's 400 disc changer actually seemed quite reasonable.
Of course the units were very expensive, and at the end of the day you have to deal with a Blu-ray player interface, and we all know how awful that is with the forced ads/menus etc.
I've got about 400 Blu-rays and 200 DVDs on my server right now.
The averages seem to be:
Blu-ray ISO: 25.4 GB
Blu-ray MKV: 22.3 GB
DVD ISO: 5.0 GB
DVD MKV: 4.3 GB
I have a mixture of ISO and MKV because ripping to MKV requires some interaction, but I can deal with ISO later.
And my new file server has 40 TB usable space right now, not counting parity discs, and still space for 8 more discs (assuming I buy an extra controller). I think I'm setup for a while now!
The issue is that I originally built a gaming PC that is now predominantly used for media, so there are only five hard drive bays. And my motherboard only has eight SATA connectors. (1x SSD, 2x Blu-ray, 5x HDD)
I really need to do a complete rebuild, but have been putting it off for some time now, choosing to upgrade drive capacity before anything else. I should start another topic for this in the hardware section.
Justin, 6TB drives are now out <$300. I predict you will have a port free soon (One of your HDD is bound to die) = 5TB upgrade!
Less than $300!? Here, the cheapest drives are the new Seagates, and those are $700 - more than twice what I paid for my 4TB WD Se drives.