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Stupid questions are the only ones I can answer ;)
So the layering of audio and video is one of the central
capabilities of tmpgenc. As soon as you begin the process
(either with the project wizard or manually), the first
thing you need to do is tell tmpgenc where to find your
audio and video files. That's it. When you have selected
whatever options you want, the software will "burn" them
together automatically. Just be aware that tmpgnc does not
handle all audio formats, and you may need to do some conversions
if you have problems. Check these boards for answers to these
questions.
For an editor, it depends on what you want to do exactly.
If you have basic stuff you need now (like fades, trims,
and simple effects), you might try Cool Edit 96 which is
free. Then if you need to upgrade to a more complete package
like Cool Edit 2000, it is an easy transition since the interface
is simple.
I think that tempgenc does this step. it should create
one mpeg file containing the embedded audio that you can simply
burn to dvd with sumthing like Nero. Anyone please correct me as I
am having some audio problems myself.
Does anybody know anything about the release date of Tmpgenc Server? I think it was supposed to be out in 2002, but I'm afraid this project has been abandoned...
I've got a Dazzle DVC II Capture Card (woo!).
After almost 12 months of fiddling I can finally get my VCD captures to play on my DVD player smoothly. (I'm getting to the point soon!).
The process I have to follow is....
- Capture using Moviestar 1500kbps Video (for XVCD) and 192Kbps Audio.
- Simple Demux the clip using TMPGENC
- Simple Mux the clip (VCD Non-standard) using TMPGENC.
Hey presto!
If anyone is wondering why I have to de-mux and re-mux its because Moviestar/Dazzle screw up the Video/Audio multiplexing around 20-30 minutes into the capture giving me a stuttering effect when its played back on my DVD player(Dansai 852) (plays fine on my pc though). Basically Dazzle should pull their bloody finger out and fix the prob.... (sigh!)
However my question is....
I capture maybe 10 seperate 50min clips at a time (my fav TV prog) and then start going through de-muxing and re-muxing the clips using TMPGENC. Is there any way of doing all clips as a batch process so I can leave my PC doing the work overnight????
How do i uninstall tmpg, do i just delete the whole file?? i a worried about leaving unused parts being left on my computer could someone help me out here?
I have created several svcd files with tmpgenc (PAL svcd template), and in one of my standalone players the audio is delayed about 500 ms. I have tested the file in another player and in the PC, and the sound is OK.
If I use nero svcd pluging to encode the files, then the audio is OK in all players and in the PC.
Does anybody know any solution, or at least the reason for this delay?
Is it a problem of Tmpgenc, or Nero? (apart from a problem of my player :-) )
Well Burning to a To High of a Speed Can cause Sync problems, I usually will not burn any faster than 8 speed..And Bitrate spikes can cause the DVD player to Play the Video a Bit slower than the Audio, but besides this I can"t help...
It could be a compatibility problem with your player and Nero.
Make sure you have the latest version. Don't burn at too high a speed.
Try another burning program. VCDeasy is a good one and free.
If you still have problems then try VOB Instant CD/DVD, which has been known to solve this problem.
I have successfully encoded an AVI file to MPEG in TMPGEnc with
excellent video quality. However, the resulting MPEG does not
contain the audio track, no sound at all.
I used VisualDub to extract the audio to .wav (as the source was a
mix of wav and mp3), encoded again with separate video and audio
input files, and got the same result. The wav file seems intact
and functions properly in any player.
Any ideas? Are there any settings in TMPGEnc for audio or multiplexing
that would be relevant? There are some environment parameters including
sound, but none seem to be obvious fixes.
After reading the boards more carefully, i have also tried using
AVI-MUX to no avail (avi-mux could not handle this otherwise
playable wav file).
I tried getting a view into the file with the abcAVI editor
but this did not indicate whether or not the audio contained
AC3 format.
Does anyone know if a sound editor like Cool Edit would be able
to normalize the wav format to make it readable by tmpgenc? The
original file was a Flash animation file exported to AVI (which
seems to have standard audio). Then 4 of these AVIs were spliced
in a storyline using Videowave 4 into one large AVI file. This
is where i suspect the encoding problem arises for the audio only.
unfortunately, i cannot export all 4 files at once from flash. as
a backup idea (and i will take any ideas from above), does the
merge feature in tmpgenc work only for merging layers such as
audio/image, or can u put multiple AVI files back-to-back to
create one long MPEG?
I have created/burned several VCDs with little or no problems but I am now having a problem trying to create a VCD from a mpg file that is 576x244. I know this is a odd size but I have done it once before.
No matter what settings I seem to apply the output on my DVD player appears blocky and very jerky.
Any ideas?? The usual symptons .. it plays on my PC fine. It is the same CDs I have used for other succesful VCD burns so I doubt it is that but I guess it is possible.
Jerky Playback is usually Caused By encodeing to the Wrong Frame rate..Make sure that you aren"t encodeing a Pal File to NTSC or a NTSC File to Pal, Tmpgenc does not convert frame rates Properly...
hi everyone.. how ya all doin?
i was just wonderin if anybody could help me with a new vcd i tried 2 make.
i encoded the avi file into mpeg and it works fine. Then i tried 2 burn it with nero.. but it comes up with an error saying i don't have the right settings like the size. but i the movie i have is in widescreen.. so i encoded it in widescreen.. 16:9 ratio.. can i just burn it still? previously i encoded my avi in nero and it worked on my dvd player but the ratio was 4:3 and it looked really crappy..
anywayz.. 2 the next part of my problem.. i burnt my 16:9 mpeg i had just created with nero and when i played my new vcd.. it works on gdivx player as a vcd.. but when i try 2 play it on my dvd player.. the vcd plays.. but there is no picture.. can anyone help me plz...
Do you have 16:9 TV?
16:9 is an illegal aspect ratio for VCD, but if you do it correctly it may still play in your player, but it is pointless encoding to 16:9 if your TV is 4:3
Do you have 16:9 TV?
16:9 is an illegal aspect ratio for VCD, but if you do it correctly it may still play in your player, but it is pointless encoding to 16:9 if your TV is 4:3
Since Ulead DWS no longer works without crashing, I had to come up a new way to handle anamorphic video.
The key was make the source Mpeg files be "4:3" so authoring programs like DVDit LE accept them and then use IfoEdit to change the aspect ratio setting in the final DVD database to 16:9.
Changing Mpeg files encoded as 16:9 to 4:3 can be done with several programs. The AVestensione tool at www.offeryn.com works. Or Demux and use:
After authoring to get a DVD-Video database, the VTS_*.IFO files (usually only one) associated with each group of VOB files need to be edited.
Start IfoEdit and open the IFO file. A few lines down will be the "Title Set (Movie) attributes:".
Double click the "Video:" line, select 16:9, hit OK, and then hit Save at the bottom. Answer "Yes" to save the BUP (backup) file as well.
That's it! Set top players will letterbox the video and software players will properly size the windows.
The only drawback is that you can't have 4:3 and 16:9 mixed in the same DVD since aspect ratio is set for an entire Title Set which typically includes all material.
There is an easier way of changeing the Flags from 4:3 to 16:9, download a Program called "DVD Patcher" it will let you patch the header of the file from 4:3 to 16:9 without makeing an extra file...
I'll have to give DVD patcher a try. The point of my post is really IfoEdit since that fixes the post authoring database when anamorphic source was intentionally ,or accidentally, set to 4:3.
There may be friendlier software than IfoEdit but the above exercise is a good way for people to cut their teeth on that powerful tool.
This all demonstrates how the DVD-Video software layer uses a single flag in the IFO file which has been derived from the settings of the Mpeg source files. That is where Ulead DWS is pretty cool because it creates two title sets when both aspect ratios are used in the same project.
i'm trying to convert .m2v (video & sound) files to .mpeg files fixing aspectratio. it says that this software is able to do that, but when i try opening .m2v file it says can't open.
If you are trying to do this. Try an earlier version such as 2.54 or any version before they restricted the decoders that can be used and made some other changes that cause some files that should be supported and that did work in 2.54 to not to work anymore. It also seemed that 2.54 and earlier versions actually checked the format of the file, not just the extension, before saying that it could not do anything with it. In working with all the decoders on your system it was a unique tool that had not blocks nor restrictions. If something didn't work ok it just doesn't work but sometimes you were able to do some surprising things such as asf -> mpeg2.
But I guess they gave into the pressure. But they should have at least given an unsupported option to enable promisciuos decoder mode!!!
The reason for this is they received to many support requests and etc.
I am purchased the Plus version and things went downhill big time since 2.5.4.
I almost wish that I had saved my money but I dream of the good ole days and hope they will bring it back and not just turn this into another piece of crap like DVDit (programmed to crash by people that do not know how to program correctly).
This is a tool. Just like a hammer you can use it for many purposes but they trust you not to wack someone in the head with it or hit your finger.
I just don't think that they trust the Plus or non plus users of the tool to be smart enough to realise they will have problems with some decoders. They could have just listed their supported decoders on paper as supported they did not have to cripple their software. If they want to coddle users release TMPGEnc Wizard mode only or something. I just think it was a stupid overhanded shortsighted descision.
Actually it was the 2.57 version were they changed the Mpeg2 decoder, and as of that version Tmpgenc Supports Even More Mpeg2 decoders, Tmpgenc Still supports the Old "M2V.vfp" Decoder...and You can encode Many Different Formats Like ASF and WMV and ASX with Tmpgenc as you could will every other version, Most causes for Tmpgenc not working correctly on some systems is Because of the Configuration of the system and not Tmpgenc even though Tmpgenc can be a little Touchy at times....anyways To your Question, if you Have M2V file then you have a Mpeg file Cuz M2V is Mpeg but if you have to encode it anyways the Best way is to load the M2V file into DVD2AVI and Make a D2V project File and then encode that with tmpgenc, DVD2AVI decodes Much faster and Better than Tmpgenc"s decoders....
You could do this with 2.5.4 without it giving you that error.
I know that for a fact.
You seem to have missed the point entirely.
TMPG changed the way it handled decoders as of v2.57 not before.
The reason for this and a good reason too is to make TMPG more stable when working with third party codecs.
Some codecs are unpredictable in use and some are just downright crap, not all MPEG2 codecs are the same.
TMPG still works with MPEG2 codecs for decoding, the ones in question being Sony, Cyberlink and Ligos. That's a choice of three which have been fully tested with TMPG and are supported to work.
In the earlier versions of TMPG I used a version of the Ligos codecs which are now incompatible with the new versions of TMPG, so I now use the Cyberlink codec which can be downloaded from most codec sites.
As for DVD2AVI, lets just say there is no better MPEG2 decoder available. If you want best quality fast decoding then DVD2AVI is the best bet.
>HI,
i'm trying to convert .m2v (video & sound) files to .mpeg files fixing aspectratio. it says that this software is able to do that, but when i try opening .m2v file it says can't open.
what can you suggest?
To answer this original question. There is no need to re-encode the file to change the aspect ratio. The aspect ratio is simply a flag which can be changed quite easily with certain software.
An M2T file is a MPEG2 Transport stream which TMPG does not handle.
TMPG only handles program and system streams.
You may convert the Transport stream to an MPEG2 program stream with MPEG2VCR.
I have been using TMPG to encode AVI to MPG then burn VCD or SVCD on Nero. Everything has worked fine. Recently now TMPG freezes (stops responding according to Task Manager) while I am encoding. It hangs usually around 70 - 90% done. It only seems to happen when I use Source Range to split it into 2 SVCD's. The only thing I have done different is I loaded Godian's Knot (GKnot)and deinstalled it. I dont know if this screwed up TMPG. I uninstalled TMPG and reloaded it and still have the same issue.
Well you can allways Use Virtual Dub to Cut the AVI file in Half and encode it in Parts..Or encode the whole file and Cut it later with the "Mpeg Tools" that is if you can get them to work....