DV vs MJPEG
A detailed comparison of Digital Video and Motion JPEG — file size, quality, compatibility, and which format to choose for your workflow.
Digital Video
Video FilesDV (Digital Video) is a standard for recording digital video on tape, widely used in MiniDV camcorders. It uses intraframe DCT compression at 25 Mbps, providing broadcast-quality video with frame-accurate editing capabilities.
About DV filesMotion JPEG
Video FilesMotion JPEG (MJPEG) is a video format where each frame is independently compressed as a JPEG image. This intraframe-only approach enables easy frame-accurate editing and is widely used in security cameras and digital camera video modes.
About MJPEG filesStrengths Comparison
DV Strengths
- Lossless capture from tape via FireWire.
- Each frame compressed independently — editing without intermediate transcoding.
- Universal support in every pre-2010 NLE.
- Fixed 25 Mbps bitrate — predictable storage and edit performance.
MJPEG Strengths
- Trivially simple — any JPEG decoder handles frames.
- Every frame is a keyframe — instant seek and edit.
- No inter-frame dependencies — recover from packet loss easily.
- Hardware cost is minimal — any JPEG decoder works.
- Lossless across edits — cutting and rejoining doesn't degrade quality.
Limitations
DV Limitations
- Legacy — camcorders and tape decks are out of production.
- Large files vs modern codecs (13 GB per hour).
- Interlaced video requires deinterlacing for modern displays.
- FireWire ports disappeared from PCs around 2012 — archive-capture is a specialty now.
MJPEG Limitations
- 3-5× larger than MPEG-2; 8-10× larger than H.264 at comparable quality.
- No audio — requires a separate track.
- No standard container — appears inside AVI, MOV, MKV, MJPEG-over-HTTP.
- Obsolete for mass-market delivery.
Technical Specifications
| Specification | DV | MJPEG |
|---|---|---|
| MIME type | video/dv | video/x-motion-jpeg |
| Extensions | .dv, .dif | — |
| Standard | IEC 61834 (consumer DV); SMPTE 314M (DVCPRO) | — |
| Bitrate | 25 Mbps (DV); 50 Mbps (DVCPRO50); 100 Mbps (DVCPRO HD) | — |
| Native interface | IEEE 1394 FireWire | — |
| Extension | — | .mjpeg, .mjpg |
| Frame format | — | Sequential JPEG (Baseline, usually 4:2:0) |
| Typical containers | — | AVI, MOV, MP4 (rare), raw stream |
| Common in | — | IP security cameras, USB webcams, scientific imaging |
Typical File Sizes
DV
- 1 minute of DV capture ~216 MB
- 1 hour MiniDV tape (full) ~13 GB
MJPEG
- 1-min VGA webcam clip 40-80 MB
- 1-min 1080p IP camera stream 300-500 MB
- Canon DSLR 720p video (1 min) ~550 MB
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Convert between DV and MJPEG online, free, and without installing anything. Encrypted upload, automatic deletion after 2 hours.
Frequently Asked Questions
DV (Digital Video) is a video container format that bundles one or more video streams, audio tracks, and optional subtitles into a single file. The container format determines how metadata is organised and which codecs can live inside; the visual quality itself depends on the codec (H.264, H.265, VP9, AV1) rather than the DV wrapper. It is part of the video files family.
MJPEG (Motion JPEG) is a video container format that bundles one or more video streams, audio tracks, and optional subtitles into a single file. The container format determines how metadata is organised and which codecs can live inside; the visual quality itself depends on the codec (H.264, H.265, VP9, AV1) rather than the MJPEG wrapper. It is part of the video files family.
VLC, MPV and PotPlayer play nearly every DV file on desktop. Browser support varies: modern Chromium, Firefox and Safari play common containers via the HTML5 <video> tag, but niche DV variants may fail. If a device refuses your DV, convert to MP4 with our DV to MP4 converter for universal playback.
VLC, MPV and PotPlayer play nearly every MJPEG file on desktop. Browser support varies: modern Chromium, Firefox and Safari play common containers via the HTML5 <video> tag, but niche MJPEG variants may fail. If a device refuses your MJPEG, convert to MP4 with our MJPEG to MP4 converter for universal playback.
Upload your DV to KaijuConverter and pick MP4, MOV, MKV, WebM, or any other target. Our pipeline uses FFmpeg under the hood and stream-copies when codecs are compatible (no quality loss) or transcodes at high-quality defaults otherwise. Conversion runs server-side; both files delete within two hours.
Only when the target requires re-encoding. If the codecs inside DV match what the target container supports, FFmpeg stream-copies the streams and the output is bit-identical to the source. Transcoding uses transparent quality defaults (CRF 20–23 H.264) and produces output indistinguishable from the original at normal viewing distance.