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Pegasys Products BBS [ Sorted by thread creation date ]
OK ive got some 45 minute video in mpeg2 dvd quality, and im TRYING to encode it for dvd burning using SONIC. Now then, when i try encoding it to supervcd, the file shows as around 800 mb, about half as big as in dvd. but when i upload it into sonic for buring it shows as 1.7 gb which is the same as the dvd quality video.
i dont know what i could be doing wrong. I dont know if the 2 pass vbr, or the motion search precision is set too high because those are the only two settings i change from standard.
any suggestions? im looking to fit four 45 minute videos on ONE dvd.
You can"t use Sonic to Put SuperVCD on to DVD..What is happening is Sonic wants to re-encode your SVCD files to DVD Specs and that is why they are so big....If you want to Put SVCD Files on to DVD it is Possible without re-encodeing and you can get 2 or 3 Full movies on a DVD this Way but you have to use a DVD authoring Program that Supports Authoring SVCD to DVD Like "DVD-Lab", You can download a 30day working demo at http://www.mediachance.com/dvdlab/ But the audio has to be 48000hz for it to be on DVD and regular SVCD"s have 44100hz audio so you will probably need to re-encode the audio to 48000hz before authoring to DVD....Good Luck
I must be missing something, (old age has its privledges), I have added several menu templates of my own to TMPGEnc Author. I now no longer need them and would like to remove them from the drop down list. Is there a way to do this? I have looked around to try to see where thr listing is kept, but to date have been unable to find it. Any help would be appreciated.
It is just easy thing. Goto the install fold of TMPGEnc DVD Author, then "TEMPLATE", remove the template file with ".tme",that correspond with your templete, So when you return to application, in the drop down menu, it will be disppear.
I have inconsistent results with trying to clip the beginning and ending of my video files to the exact frame I want.
Sometimes the file is clipped on the exact frame I want, regardless of frame type (I,B,P).
Sometimes the file is clipped over 100 frames (many frame sets) from the frame selected. I can identify up to which frame it jumps back, with the next frame jumping forward.
The problem is greater at the beginning of files, but also happens while clipping the ending of files.
Mostly I am editing VRO (Video Recording Object) files. TMPGEnc is able to do this by accessing the CoDec that comes with CyberLink's PowerDVD program. At first I thought it could be related to the CoDec, but it also happens with MPEG files.
What is the cause of this? Is there a solution? Did I give enough information to answer these questions?
Thanks,
«Collector»
P.S. Also, if I don't take special care, the program often hangs (stops responding) while reviewing the video to select edit points. I can't be sure if this is related.
Well Tmpgenc"s Mpeg editor is not a Frame accurate editor, It is supposed to just do simple Splitting and Joining, Frame accurate mpeg editors are usually expensive because Mpeg files aren"t meant to be edited so if you don"t cut on an I frame at the end/Beginning of a Gop then it will automaticly go to the next I frame at the end/Beginning of a GOP..With Frame accurate Mpeg editors if you cut on a Frame that isn"t an I frame it re-encodes the Gop so that the Frame is a I Frame..One of the Best Frame accurate Mpeg editors is called "Womble Mpeg2VCR" it is very versitile and easy to use and it can even add transitions and Images to the mpeg file without re-encodeing the whole file, It might be something worth checking into....Cheers
Since I've been using tmpgenc. I can't remove .Avi-files from my computer,
I always get the message " file is being used by another program..." I tried to shut down my computer, closed applications in the task manager and even tried to delete some of the avi-files in "safe-mode" wich worked for a few files, but not all of them... can somebody please help, cause my harddisk is overloaded
There is known bug in Windows XP (wait ... its a feature).
When you click on an avi file, a preview of it is shown on the bottom left of the explorer window. When you try to delete it you can't because it is being used ..... by the preview window. There is a registry setting to turn this off or just switch to Windows classic mode which does not have the preview.
Or just try right clicking the file without left clicking first and then delete.
If not successful then try the following fix - your problem arises
because XP sometimes does not release the file after gathering the information from it that it displays when you right-click on a movie file and go to properties.
1. Open up regedit
2. Goto HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTSystemFileAssociations.avishellexPropertyHandler
3. Delete the "Default" value which should be "{87D62D94-71B3-4b9a-9489-5FE6850DC73E}"
Restart and try deleting file now, and you should be able to, but if you still have problems and you can't delete in safemode then you must have a corrupt system which would likely warrant a re-install.
In that case use the WINNT32 /unattend command to reinstall WindowsXP without changing your personal settings or touching your files.
I have been encoding my Ulead VS7-edited AVI Type1 DV files successfully in Tmpgenc. I then tried using the frameserver plugin, but when I start the frameserving, the same file causes TMPgenc to report an "error when ACM is inisitialised".
I mucked around and found that if I chose Video only this problem is avoided, and it looks as if my audio in the source is not the same spec as the template (but TMPG accepts the file for normal encoding so why shouldnt it accept it frameserving?) but I really dont need to go the extra step to split audio, encode audio elsewhere and remux, it's a waste of time for the jobs i'm doing as the audio encoding with TMPG is fine.
It seems there that the ACM(Audio Compression Manager) is having trouble decoding your audio.
You don't need to split, re-encode and remux else where, but my advice is to demux the audio from your AVI to wav using Virtualdub or whatever then use that as the audio source along with your frame server file as the Video in TMPG and then encode.
I'm now in great need of VFAPI SDK which seems unavailable at"http://www.tmpgenc.net/e_vfapi.html". Anyone who has a copy of it please send to: zhou_heng@yahoo.com
Thanks a lot!
No encoder can give you free MPEG2 encoding, not legally anyway due to MPEG2 licensing issues, but the MPEG1 encoding is NOT restricted in the free version of TMPG.
Minion got my "No video out, only audio" problem fixed, oh joy, run TMPGE for an hour only to find strange colors and shading of only a few bits (I think). I have a screenshot at http://www.paulv.net/image2.jpg I have tried this now on two AVI files (DV from Pinnacle Studio)on both VBR and CBR. Same thing, although I got smart and am now testing on a very short clip.
Here is what I'm trying to do, maybe you can make suggestions or corrections.
I have old 8mm analog tapes, which by all measure is the same quality as gold old VHS. According to the Pinnacle default for VHS quality to MPEG, it is 352x240 @ 2400 bits, can't recall what audio. Makes perfect sense to me. But if I record that quality, my standalone DVD player (Apex 1200) won't read it as a VCD. OK, I understand that VCD is supposed to be 1150, although I've read that one can use as high as 1775 and still have it be read as MPEG1.
Since my goal is to put these 8mm's onto DVD anyway, I thought I would encode to MPEG-2, same 352x240, but VBR. I also set TMPGE for MPEG Layer 2 audio as my goal is to save DVD space, and although the old camcorder was recording stereo, let's face it, it is effectively mono.
Perhaps I should go back to MPEG1 @ 2400 bits. Would a standalone DVD play that, or would it, too, see it as a non-standard VCD? Or could I just change the header in MPEG tools to fool any VCD or standalone DVD? (I would burn a test disk, except I'm about out and waiting for the UPS man to deliver more.)
I want to convert a PAL MPEG1 or PAL MPEG-2 (which ever is easiest) into NTSC MPEG-2 or DVD (equivalent) VOB?
What is the easiest way of doing this? I really dont understand the frame rates issue and audio stretching! Is there some software out there which'll do all of this automatically? I mean if some VCRs and DVD player can easily reproduce these formats then why is it so hard to convert it on the PC?
It actually isn"t very hard to stretch the audio and change the Frame rate and Ashy and I have explained several different methods on this Forum, but there is not special Program that will do it in the Click of a Button.....so Just Find one of the Posts were it is explained how to do it because re-explaining it would be a Little redundant.....
Minion got my "No video out, only audio" problem fixed, oh joy, run TMPGE for an hour only to find strange colors and shading of only a few bits (I think). I have a screenshot at http://www.paulv.net/image2.jpg I have tried this now on two AVI files (DV from Pinnacle Studio)on both VBR and CBR. Same thing, although I got smart and am now testing on a very short clip.
Here is what I'm trying to do, maybe you can make suggestions or corrections.
I have old 8mm analog tapes, which by all measure is the same quality as gold old VHS. According to the Pinnacle default for VHS quality to MPEG, it is 352x240 @ 2400 bits, can't recall what audio. Makes perfect sense to me. But if I record that quality, my standalone DVD player (Apex 1200) won't read it as a VCD. OK, I understand that VCD is supposed to be 1150, although I've read that one can use as high as 1775 and still have it be read as MPEG1.
Since my goal is to put these 8mm's onto DVD anyway, I thought I would encode to MPEG-2, same 352x240, but VBR. I also set TMPGE for MPEG Layer 2 audio as my goal is to save DVD space, and although the old camcorder was recording stereo, let's face it, it is effectively mono.
Perhaps I should go back to MPEG1 @ 2400 bits. Would a standalone DVD play that, or would it, too, see it as a non-standard VCD? Or could I just change the header in MPEG tools to fool any VCD or standalone DVD? (I would burn a test disk, except I'm about out and waiting for the UPS man to deliver more.)
Well The screen shot you left was Just a Blank Media Player screen so i can not help you there.....
If you are Trying to Make a DVD but have Low Resolution files then useing 352+240 is a Valid DVD resolution it is called the SIF Format which means you can Make a Valid DVD useing Mpeg1 or 2 (I prefer Mpeg2 for Quality) and 48000hz audio ,the standard actually calls for Mpeg1 at a Max of 1800kbs but Mpeg 2 Works Just as well or better and Most DVD authoring Programs should author this Format without a Problem....Cheers