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Is it possible to start playing movie from divx menu with PLAY button? I only manage to do that with OK button on the remote control. For some reason I would realy like to have that.
i use divx to encode the video. i simply choose multipass, first pass and encode the video and then multipass, nth pass and encode again, when i start to encode the nth pass it tells me that the file is already exist and overwrite the file. is it ok? is it the right way?
I have some video files with a black bar above and below the picture (videos were originally 16:9 aspect but have been reprocessed by Tunebite software into 4:3 aspect - hence the lines). I'm attempting to use TMPGEnc 4.0 Express to remove these lines out and restore the original 16:9 aspect by using the crop and resize filters. Using the Centre (Custom Size) facility on the resize filter I've set the picture size to 672 x 376 pixels, but when I proceed to the Format step, even though I set the aspect ratio to 16:9 on the Output Format screen, in the Format screen the only available pixel sizes are 720 x 576,704 x 576, 352 x 576, and 352 x 288, none of which seem to relate to a 16:9 aspect. When I run the Encode stage, the preview picture still has the black bars above and below (with 4:3 aspect set it is the same as the original Tunebite output, and in 16:9 the picture appears stretched). I was assured by TMPG before buying this programme that it would do this task, and this is what they told me: QUOTE "In the XPress 4 do the following: -At Filters window > choose Picture resize filter > then uncheck the 'Keep aspect ratio' option, but it's possible that the image becomes little bit stretched because the original aspect ratio is changed.(see screen shot).-Then encode your file and import it at Author 3." UNQUOTE. These seem to be incomplete instructions. Can anyone assist me, please?
First, I'm assuming your output format is PAL DVD based on the resolutions you mentioned.
For widescreen DVD's, it's not the number of pixels that make it widescreen, it's the pixel aspect ratio.
So open up the clip editing window for your clip, go to Clip Properties, and change the aspect ratio to "Pixel 16:11 (PAL 16:9)".
Then, in the Filters tab, crop out your black bars with the crop filter.
Then with the resize filter, set to "Center (Custom Size)", and set the dimensions to 720x576.
Now you can go to the Format stage, choose the PAL DVD format, and select 720x576 as your resolution. When you preview it, it should be widescreen without black bars.
Hey guys,
I have an HD camcorder that records in AVCHD format. I have been usin TMPGEnc 4.0 Xpress to convert the AVCHDs into a single .avi video file converted in divx format. When you do the converstion you can set many options to enhance quality sound etc... but it also allows you to set a resolution you want your .avi to come out. The avchd that i record is set to 1920x1080 on my camcorder which is too big of resolution for most normal TVs and Dvd players. When i did my trial conversion I set it 800x600 ... and that didnt work. dvd said doesnt support resolution. So can anyone help me out and tell me what the right resolution to set it to, to make .avi playable on my divx dvd player???
I'm talking about pixel aspect ratio, not the ratio of the resolution dimensions.
Changing it to 40:33 pixel aspect ratio will not crop anything; it will stretch the image to the correct 16:9 aspect ratio of your source file. Obviously, 720x480 is not a 16:9 ratio, so the DVD format(or in this case, the DivX format) stretches the pixels themselves to obtain the correct aspect ratio of 4:3 or 16:9.
So in the DivX format options, you'd set the Size to 720 x 480, and the Aspect ratio to "Pixel 40:33 (NTSC 16:9)". I'd use profile type "Home theater".
I discovered something about using a 2nd audio source on a clip which you edit that is quite surprising.
What I discovered is that if you add a 2nd audio source that is, say, 5 minutes long to a 15 minute clip, then you edit that clip (eg. you edit out the first 10 minutes out of it leaving a 5 minute clip), that 2nd audio source will not be included in the output (nor can you hear it during simulation). If I remove all edits, then you can hear the 2nd audio source. I tried adding the 2nd audio source AFTER I had edited the clip and got the same results.
It seems rather surprising that the 2nd audio would not be applied to the beginning of the final, edited clip. I got around this by first creating output of the final 5 minutes (with no audio) then using that output as the clip source for another project which I then added the 2nd audio source to. A long way around it seems.
Since the cut-edits don't actually happen until output, it will put the audio at the beginning of the video as if there were no cuts. In other words, the cut-edits aren't final until you output.
So yeah, you'll have to cut-edit, output, then bring it back in just as you did.
OK, I can live with this, but it does seem reasonable to assume that the 2nd audio source would be applied after the video edits are taken into account.
I think it's more of a technical issue. If you think about it, when the file is being outputted it is encoding the audio and video together so it would have to start both the audio and video at the same time, and thus it would make the edits in the order they appear. For it to apply the audio track after the edits, it would essentially have to do 2 passes where it would edit the video on the first pass and apply the audio on the second pass. This would be further complicated by having two audio tracks where the first is being edited normally along with the video but the second is supposed to be applied after the edits.
And what if you made cuts, then added a second audio source, then made more cuts? Should the audio start after the first set of cuts and then be affected by the second set of cuts? The program just has no way of knowing.
In the end, even if they were to program the software that way, it would still take twice as long or about the same time as encoding the edits and then bringing it back in to add the audio.
To me, it's more logical the way it's set up now. It's like adding a musical score to a movie--you do it after you've edited the film.
Yea, that makes sense. I used to use Nero for DVD authoring and you could make your video edits and then apply a 2nd audio source to the pre-encoded edited video and then you would encode it (just once) to get your desired output. But as I recall, Nero took longer too so perhaps it was doing it in two steps.
Hi!
Error are in the slideshow making when put the audio file (mp3).
When i simulate it, the audio is wrong, the playback start in the middle of the song or similar.
I need help Please!
Thanks.
I'm running TMPGEnc DVD Author 3 with DivX Authoring (v. 3.1.2.176) and have some video files with a black bar above and below the picture (videos were originally 16:9 aspect but have been reprocessed by Tunebite software into 4:3 aspect - hence the lines). Is TMPGEnc DVD Author 3 able to crop these lines out to restore 16:9 aspect, and if so how is this done? If not, is there any other TMPGEnc software that will do this?
I really like TDA3 so far but I would like to see the ability to add simple transitions such as fades between clips added to the program. I know MPEG Editor allows you to add transitions but I don't see that it supports ASF files, which is my primary source format.
I have been transcoding? my home movies that were taken in 1080. I have been using the Divx encoder via the TMPenc 4.15 Xpress program. I am however at a loss as to why there is a 4 Gigabyte limit. Maybe someone can explain this. After all why do HighDef in Divx if there is a 4 Gigabyte limit?
I understand that TMPGEnc DVD Author 3 with DivX Authoring includes a Dolby Digital/AC3-Plugin for but only two stereo channels.
How can I upgrade to a 5.1-DD-decoder?
Thank you.
You are right, DVD Author 3 handles video files exactly as you mentioned - problem resolved.
I observe a follow-up problem, however:
When I record a pure DD 5.1 audio file in .ts format, which is identified as a52 by VLC-Player, and offer it to DVD Author 3, the program responds, that it 'Could not open the video part of the file . . .ts. Only the audio part can be opened.'
That's exactly what I expected, but in fact it does not open the audio part of my file. How can I convince Author to accept it as being a clip?
Do you have another good idea? I would gratefully acknowledge.
Thank you.
So you want to add the separate audio file to an existing clip?
Add your video clip first, then in the Clip Properties window, you can select a different file as the audio input for the clip. I don't have an audio DD5.1 audio .ts file to test this with, but it might work.
Hi, I've been using TMPGEnc with great success for years, now
suddenly it won't open video source files, and will only select
the video file as the audio source.
It gives the message that the format is unknown or unsupported
but then opens an Windows SMSS.exe process through ZoneAlarm.
Will your programs get suport for the new MS mediacenter format wtv?
so I can use it to cut out comercel brackes after upgrade to?
Or shold one try not to get anything in that format (have not found anything that suports it yet.)
thanks for great program.