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Pegasys Products BBS [ Sorted by thread creation date ]
I have a movie split into two files one that is 790mb so im gonna have to split that into two files, so than the second file is only 53mb so i dont want to burn the first file on two dif. because of the split and then the third file. Is there any way i can merge the remaining piece of the first file with the secod file and fit the whole movie on only 2 cd's rather than 3. And another question i use the NTSC video-cd option can i use anything else that would make the quality better on my dvd player even if i dont have a dvd burner? thanx answer ASAP
Firstly if you are talking about MPEG movies then u cannot use Virtualdub to merge them. You will have to use the merge&cut feature in TMPG to do this.
Secondly why bother splitting and merging at all. Your 790mb movie will quite easily fit on to an 80min cd as 80min CDR's can hold 800mb of MPEG data.
Ok, I have a dvd ripped to hard drive, use dvd2avi to encode, then open in TMPGEnc, there is both a dv file, and a wav file. After encoding tho, there is no sound. Any suggestions?
Ok, here I am, having this silly problem. When running dvd2avi, I see a solid, green screen. After encoding, I open in TMPGEnc, and it is still a solid green color. I have never had this problem before. Any suggestions?
If you see a solid green screen in the DVD2AVI preview window then that is what you will get when you encode.
I would suggest re-ripping the vobs again and make sure that your ripping program is ripping the correct stream.
Questions:
1. If encoding w/ overclocked CPU (1900+), TMPGEnc encounter some sort of memory overflow error. (This is the only program that has this overclock issue). Why is this the case? Tmpgenc uses more memory power? Anyway around it besides slowing down my CPU?
2. For some reason, when encoding a 2 hrs video, from MS DV AVI file (Made from Prem 6.0), TMPGEnc stops at ~10min (9'58") time. The video segment is continous, not like there is a joining of 2 clips. I move the clip around and it again stops at the same time frame. How do I fix this?
Encoding is a very CPU/memory intensive process. Overclocking is a risky buisness at the best of times, but when your system is pushed to it's limits by such a task as encoding then your systems weaknesses will start to show through.
AMD processors are not the best CPU's to overclock due to the fact that they already run at high temperatures and encoding will push up this temperature drastically. If you need to overclock then at least provide your system with an extra exhast fan to remove the hot air re-circulating inside your system. This will make a big difference to the temperature.
Having said this it may not be the processor at fault, but your memory will also be overclocked and you may be pushing it too hard.
A lot of motherboards nowadays allow the frequency of the memory to be adjusted independently of the CPU frequency, so check this in your BIOS and reduce it accordingly.
Ok guys, did vcdeasy, nice program. Adjust the resolution,bitrate and CQ, Have multiplexed audio. Had a successful write with vcdeasy, burned great, looks wonderful on WinDVD. Beautiful picture on the TV,BUT....Still jumpy and audio is out of sync. Burned at 2x. bitrate is 1650, max 5000 min 1500. What do you think???
There could be a few reasons. If the source frame rate is different to the destination frame rate this will cause jerky playback. If you only see this on your DVD player then you are either encoding to the wrong format format, ensure you encode to PAL or NTSC depending on your location otherwise you player will do a conversion to your TV standard which will cause the playback to stutter.
The other and more likely reason is that your player cannot handle the high bitrate you have chosen if this only happens on your DVD player. 5000 kb/s is very high for VCD or SVCD. If your player cannot spin the disk fast enough to read the data off the disk correctly then you will experience jerks and stutters at high bitrates.
There are only a handful of drives capable of handling the bitrate you have chosen. I suggest you go to VCDhelp.com and have a look at the DVD player list to see what ur player can handle.
Will re-encode at lower max rate. Will try 3000. In the VCDeasy menu, there is an option in the playa section under misc. that says preferred tv system. Pal is selected. I am in the US and understand that ntsc is my usual format, I did not know if I needed to change that since it was not addressed in the tutorial. should I try changing that and burning at a higher speed 4x before re-encoding or does any of that matter? Thanks
I would change it to NTSC just for completeness, but I think it only affects stills and not the actual movie itself.
It is best not to burn above 4x as it can and usually does result in jerky playback. Even if it doesn't give jerky playback in your machine it will most likely cause jerky playbak in several others. So be safe and burn at 4x.
Unlikely. The only reason errors occur at higher speeds than 4x with most disks is due to the fact there are no error correction bits added when the disk is burned which means the MPEG is susceptible to corruption which only happens at higher speeds and will manifest as playback problems.
At low speeds the MPEG's own error correction is enough to cope with the errors already introduced by cheap disks, but burning at high speeds will further cause data corruption leading to playback problems.
wanted to transform a SCVD file (MPG2) into MPG1, but TMPGEnc shows me a "cannot open or not supported" command. Which version should I use and which CODEC? Can I get it to work properly at all ?
i've had same problem. but this is not a big problem.
open tmpenc (up version 2.5). open <file> <mpeg-tools>
you will see ||simple multiplex||. click on ||video input|| the <browse>-button.
select your source-video. might bee on the cd-drive. often in a "mpeg2"-folder.
the ||audio-input|| will be selected automatic.
select in ||output|| the destination folder and file on your harddisk.
in a final step(!) you must select the ||type|| at the pulldown-menu. select <mpeg-1-video-cd>.
click on <run> to start the transcoding. it will take some time. after all you can burn the new mpeg-1-file on a "vcd".
that's all.
most stand-alone-dvd-player will have no problem to deal with the "vcd". only a few have problems with the high bitrate. (in this way, i shown you, you cannot change the bitrate of the svcd-source-file to the vcd-destination-file. no work-around, sorry. but this way is the fastest way(!), because the vcd-destination-file is as big as the svcd-source-file an will take the same place on a cd. no cutting or afterworking!!).
sehe gerade, hätte ich auch wohl in deutsch beantworten können. naja, wirst es wohl trotzdem abarbeiten können.
ach ja: manchmal treten probleme am ende einer svcd auf. die sind dann meistens so vollgestopft, dass das laufwerk macken macht. du solltest daher tunlichst darauf aufpassen, dass die quell-cd ganz sauber ist. nach der arbeit, sollte man nochmal das ende vergleichen, ob auch alles wirklich drauf ist. mir schon mal passiert, dass das happy end weg war. gibt meistens ärger im freundeskreis bei einer videonacht!!!
Hi, Ihave just started this download thing and have now sucessfully downloaded all the stuff to make my first vcd -- but where and what do i dofirst???????????????????
Kym, questions like that require such a long and complex answer that the true gurus on this BBS - and I am not one of them - generally suggest that you first go to: VCDHELP.COM and read the TMPG guides that they have on that site, and then ask more specific questions.
In my experience TMPG is best suited for taking raw .AVI files (such as KaZaa downloaded movies or videos, or TV shows caught with a video capture board that is installed into your computer) and then transforming them into MPG files. You can then use the MPEG editing tools that TMPG contains to divide the 1.5 gigabyte movie file into 3 or more smaller files, that will fit on three or more VCDs. But unless you have a very special DVD player, you will not be able to simply copy the MPG files to a blank CD-R and play them. Most likely, you will need to obtain something like Nero's BURNING ROM and use this for the final "touch up" before it burns the movie to the CD-R(s).
In my experience... several months now... movie files that say that they have been encoded by MPEG 4 software (AKA DiVX) require a lot more work on our parts. Then again, this could be my ignorance talking at this point. I always seem to have to use Virtual Dub (a program that I don't understand 1/100 of, to make a wav file of the audio from the original movie file and then use this .WAV file as the audio source when I am transforming the DiVX.AVI to an .MPG format. (And even then I still have some problems with the audio matching perfectly the video... its a learning process!!!)
>But unless you have a very special DVD player, you will not be able to simply copy the MPG files to a blank CD-R and play them. Most likely, you will need to obtain something like Nero's BURNING ROM and use this for the final "touch up" before it burns the movie to the CD-R(s).
What do you mean by touch up? Surely you are not suggesting re-encoding the MPEG files with NERO. NERO is a terrible encoder and what would be the point when TMPG produces far superior files.
If you split a file with TMPG you have to ensure you choose the correct stream type before splitting to attach the required headers. I.E. 'MPEG1 Video CD' or 'MPEG2 SVCD(VBR)' depending on the file otherwise your burning program such as NERO will complain about the file and may attempt to re-encode it.
ASHY writes:
What do you mean by touch up? Surely you are not suggesting re-encoding the MPEG files with NERO. NERO is a terrible encoder and what would be the point when TMPG produces far superior files.
Hi Ashy,
No I never re-encode with NERO... what I meant was that Nero does "something" to the TMPG made file that will allow the burned file to be played on most DVD players. I don't know the proper term for it....
Ashy wrote
If you split a file with TMPG you have to ensure you choose the correct stream type before splitting to attach the required headers. I.E. 'MPEG1 Video CD' or 'MPEG2 SVCD(VBR)' depending on the file otherwise your burning program such as NERO will complain about the file and may attempt to re-encode
Paul asks
I have to be honest with you, I am not following what you said here ...
I AM having problems with the audio components of movies that I divide up to fit onto VCDs.I have done the Virtual Dub thing to extract the.wav audio from the AVI file, and then I make the MPG using the 2 different source files, the original avi for the video and then the .wav for the audio source. Then I get the new MPG and edit it into smaller files to fit onto the VCD.
Ashy...what I'm getting from you is that the job is still not over. That I am not doing something correctly after I have the MPG file but before I make the edited files. Can you please tell me specifically what step I need to do?
As I said when you split an MPEG using the MPEG tools you have choose the correct stream type as said above. If you simply leave the stream type as 'MPEG1 system(automatic)' then you will end up with a plain old MPEG file without the VCD headers required by your burning program which should complain about it.
If you continue to burn and ignore these warnings then you may find your file will not play correctly causing symptoms such as audio de-sync, no audio and playback artifacts.
If your MPEG is in sync before you burn and you have followed the steps above then you are either creating out of standard MPEG files which your DVD player cannot handle or your burning program is not compatible with your player.
Earlier versions of NERO are known to cause audio sync problems with certain players. If this is the case try a new version or a different program altogether such as VCDeasy or one known to correct this problem is 'Instant cd-dvd'
I'm new to digital video and am trying to get up on the learning curve. I purchased the Dazzle DVD Creation Station 200 for the purpose of converting analog Hi8mm video to DVD. I was under the impression from the Dazzle literature that the encoding to MPEG2 was done via an encoding chip in the device itself. Yet it seems that the captured video requires first "rendering" in Movie Star, then "assembly" in DVD Complete; two of the software suites included. The capture appears to work fine, playing cleanly in Windows XP Media Player, but becomes blocky and heavily pixelated upon "rendereing". Dazzle support isn't worth mentioning. I checked VCDhelp.com and several people suggest the use of TMPGEnc to encode the captured video, then either using DVD Complete or Nero 5.5 to burn the DVD. My questions are: 1)If the analog video is truely converted to MPEG2 by the encoding chip, what encoding, rendering, producing is then required? 2)When the DVD CS200 captures the video it creates several files, one of which is an .mpg extention. Should this file include the video and audio? I have successfuly used TMPGEnc to encode/render the .mpg file, but when I select system video+audio, TMPGEnc won't/can't access the same .mpg file for the audio. 3) Can you suggest a good resource for the novice regarding the process of creating DVD's from video?
Thanks and apologies for the lack of brevity,
Fred
From my experience these so called "Tolal Video Solution" cause more problems than Solutions, if while captureing you have the option to render to "AVI" instead of Mpeg then do it cuz the Dazzle mpeg encodeing is less than desireabled, that is why the picture becomes blocky after rendering, and encodeing the rendered mpeg to mpeg will not increase the quality..if you can render to avi format then encode with Tmpgenc then author with "Dazzale DVD Complete" then you should retain most of the quality of the captured movie, as long the the "DVD Complete" does not re-encode the file for you....You can probably find a guide that can be usefull at "vcdhelp.com".......
Currently using v2.57. No real problems to date. Only thing I noticed is that I cannot save my custom SVCD profile. I have created other profiles with no problems saving. IE CVD Anyone out have same issue?
Sorry to but in here, but Minion, you mentioned templates. Do you know what the difference is between a TPR and a MCF? When I save my own settings,it's always a TPR file, The TMPGEnc templates are all MCF. How do I make a MCF template with grayed out settings, and only leave those that I want open to adjust?
A "TPR" file is not a Template ,it is a "Project file" that is used in "Batch encodeing" or to frameserve with Vfapi, to save a template you first have to load the "unlock.mfc" template from the "Extra Folder" this will unlock the settings so you can change them , and when you want to save a template you click the "save" tab in the bottom right corner next to the "Load" tab...
Thanks Minion again. :) I also figured out what was wrong with adding chapters. I don't have the details yet, but I was able to solve the problem, and I'll be posting a "I fixed it" thread shortly. Basiclly it was the bitrate not VCDEasy.
I'm haveing problems. I am no longer able to convert avi to mpeg with tmpgenc. I'm not sure what happened. I had an older version of tmpgenc and i upgraded to 2.57 and then it stopped working with avi's and i went back to the older version and it's not working with them now either. can anyone help?
If you told us what was happening then we might be able to help you but saying that it don"t work doesn"t give us much information to go on...You wouldn"t possibly be getting a "Can not open or unsupported" error when trying to load in your avi file???If that is your problem you will find the answer on this BBS repeatedly......
I had a few days before the similar situation - I tried to get a divx converted to a VCD (or mpg). And I had another error msg.
What I did was the following: I downloaded the SW so called VIRTUALDUB from doom9.org and just started it. I opened the divx-avi file, set within the video and also the audio menu the settings to >direct stream copy< and then just saved the project as AVI file again.
I started TMPGEnc as usual, opened now my new AVI-file and ran through the same process - and this time without any error. It just did it like I expected it from the beginning.
I am trying to convert an AVI file to MPG-1 (VCD) but lowering the bit rate to 950kbps from 1150kbps so I can squeze the whole movie onto one CD. I know I'm going outside the VCD spec and will have an XVCD. My problem is even though I lower the rate, I still end up with an 850 meg file. I even lowered the rate right down to 100kbps and the output was poor quality, but the file size was still going to be big (estimation by looking at file size and frames completed/total). What am I missing to make the final mpgs smaller. Currently I am using CQ at 50% and this looks like it's also going to be an 850M file.
You only need to reduce it by 50 megs. I would try and cut some of the movie out. I did the same with the movie Jimmy Neutron. I wanted the entire movie on one CD. I was able to by cutting out the credits at the very end. In fact, it was still 815 megs, but I over-burned it using VCDEasy with no problem.
Did you use the VCD tamplete and then unlocked it and changed the bitrate? If so then even if you use 100K/s it will pad the stream to make it 1150K/s... You need to use the VCD-Nonstandart Tamplete...
You need to change the "system" setting to "Video-CD Non-standard" or Tmpgenc will add padding to it to keep it vcd compliant ,and if you need to only loose 50 mb you only need to drop the bitrate about 75kbs, but if you are makeing a non-standard VCD then you might as well use the "CQ" setting in the "Rate Controll Mode" this way you can actually raise the bitrate and get a smaller files size with Better quality......
I have been making DV AVI files with Ulead Media Studio and later use TMPGEnc to convert them to MPG with no problems. Now I am trying Premiere 6.0 and the captured DV AVI works ok with TMPGEnc but not the ones that I make after editing.
Is this because Premiere makes type 1 DV AVI and if so how can I make type 2 with Premiere?
I don"t think that Tmpgenc supports Type 1 DV,I use "Premier 6.5" and I can use any codec that i have installed on my system to render files with it so it should be the same for you, if you have the "Microsoft DV codec" then that works with Tmpgenc or you can use a compressed format like Divx5, I know on my system I must have 50 different codecs that i can use to render with in Premier, will only use certain ones to capture to but after it has been captured and you have edited it you should be able to use any codec you like, you can even frame serve from Premier to Tmpgenc but it takes a long time, or you can use any number of Mpeg encoder plugins with premier, I have a whole bunch of Mpeg plugins like "Ligos" CCE" Panasonic" "Canopus Procoder" and the new Premier Mpeg encoder than comes with Premier 6.5........