![subler for pc subler for pc](https://loftlasopa896.weebly.com/uploads/1/2/9/3/129367527/213596764.png)
Glad to hear that you were able to get to the bottom of it. Problem for you is that there's currently no subler for Windows, but I'd imagine maybe there's some tools out there that could still do the muxing for you somewhat easily and that would still be faster than encoding. That's all much quicker than encoding every blu-ray, but of course some special work and/or encoding w/handbrake will be needed for DTS tracks or Blu-Rays that are not h.264 video.
![subler for pc subler for pc](http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-cutdXinQgkE/TeJ7YTn00RI/AAAAAAAAJg8/hoUH1Aif0cs/s1600/subler_create_chapter.jpg)
SUBLER FOR PC MAC
Now, assuming the source blu-ray is h.264 and Dolby Digital on my Mac I can just use Subler and it losslessly muxes the MKV into an mp4/m4v with the Dolby Digital soundtrack in it. This gives me an MKV of around ~20gb on average. This is all *much* easier it seems on the Mac because there's no subler for Windows, but what I have considered doing is using MakeMKV to make a lossless MKV of the Blu-Ray, including audio and subtitles as simple checkboxes. You don't necessarily have to use handbrake for every blu-ray encode unless you want to. Regarding the encoding question, just to give another option.
![subler for pc subler for pc](https://p0.pxfuel.com/preview/847/225/130/blades-are-engaged-hammer-subler-adhesive-tape.jpg)
Pretty sure I was passing through DTS from my MKV rips to Plex. ^ DTS works if you jailbreak, which obviously with the ATV3 isn't an option right now.