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Hi there. Can anyone please help me. When i encode a large video file at around 83% i get an error message "Index of scan line out of range". Does anybody know what this means and if so how could i get around it.Thanks very much. :)
Usually this error pops up when encodeing Downloaded files, I think it is Due to Corrupt Frames or Corrupt Index in the Source AVI file...Usually it should have a Number after "Index Scan Line is out of Range" Like "Index Scan Line is Out of Range 240" You Might be able to Fix the AVI file by rebuliding the Index, You can use a Program called "DivFiX" to Strip the Index and then Rebuild the Index then the File should Work..You can also Use Virtual Dub to rebuild the Index or even Just Frameserve the File to Tmpgenc useing Virtual Dub should work cuz Virtual Dub should automaticly fix the corrupt index and take out Corrupt Frames.....Good Luck
i have an avi movie i did in adobe premier and i am trying to convert it to mp2 so i can get it on a dvd. i have never done this before. when i try to put in the video source/audio source in the free download it says it is unsupported. what am i doing wrong? i thought it could do avi files. do i have the wrong software?
Go to "Options" to Enviromental Settings" to "Vfapi Plugins" and Raise the Priority of the "Direct Show File Reader" to "2"..This should get your File Loaded....Cheers
ok, i got it to load. now the problem is, i am trying to burn it to a DVD. why is it so hard? i have tried using sonic my dvd with the same movie saved as an .avi, .mpg, .tpr, .m2v and every time it is almost finished the blue screen comes on and says that there's some sort of problem and i have to reboot. is there an easier way to burn dvds? i bought this thinking it would be like a cd burner (naive).
This seems like a system or software problem not an encoding problem.
What operating system are you using and do you have plenty of free space?
Have you tried a different authoring program?
Give TMPGenc DVD author a try. It is simple to use and guaranteed to work with TMPG's own files.
How did you create the MPEG files? Did you use a template or the wizard and what where your settings?
You should have 1 or 2 main files when TMPG has finished encoding depending on the method you chose.
If you have 1 file with an .MPG extension the this will be a combined Video and Audio stream which can be imported directly into some not all authoring programs.
If you have 2 files then you will have one with an .m2v extension for the video and one with a .wav extension for the audio, both of which can be imported into an authoring program.
From past experiences, I know that if an audio and video files do not have matching frame counts, TMPGEnc would disappear at 99%. So how do I know if the frames for audio and video are the same? Usually, I go to Source Range and then move the End Marker a bit before the end of the video. I switch on the audio readings and then click the fast forward button. I set the End Marker whenever there is a flat green line. But just now, I converted a test clip. I selected the last few seconds of the video. I also used the audio readings as well. The very last frame had no green lines. It was just gray. But the visual was still there. Despite that, it still converted fine with no problems. So is there a way to find out accurately if TMPGEnc would disappear at the last minute?
Also, I was wondering what the difference was between normal conversion and the option "Output MPG"?
Well I can't say I have ever had that problem which is a strange one at that.
It's not necessary to have the same length of Audio as Video and shouldn't even affect the encoding and I don't actually think your problem is even related to the audio and is probably something else.
If you set the source range to the end of the film it will encode up to that point regardless whether there is audio present or not.
If it did matter if there was audio present then I wouldn't be able to encode Video elementry streams.
If I were you I would check your config in TMPG and maybe have a look at the kind of files you are encoding.
If these are encodings from AVI's downloaded from the net then I'm not surprised you have problems because more often than not they are dodgy with corrupted indexes.
You will never get this problem with a good clean source such as a real DVD rip using something like DVD2AVI.
No it happened again! :( As I said earlier, I did a test clip of converting the last few seconds to MPEG. TMPGEnc did not disappear. But when I converted the entire thing without Source Range, it disappeared at 99%! :( This extra frustrating because my computer is so slow at converting. :( Is there a way to solve this problem? I think the AVI was a TV rip and then people subtitled it and had it up for Bittorrent.
Like I said you likely will get problems with downloaded crap off the net.
Have you tried raising the Directshow reader priority in the VFAPI plugins and installing FFDSHOW?
Maybe you could try re-idexing the AVI with Virtualdub.
When opening an AVI with Virtual dub make sur you check the box which says 'Pop up extended open options' then check 'Re-derive keyframe flags'
You can the either re-save it using the direct stream copy option or frame serve it to TMPG.
hello - regarding the environment/cpu setting 'save analyzing result of
multipass vbr to cache" - What gets saved? Where is it saved? How does it
help.
Thanks,
Dave
I belive this Option will either save the Information from the First Pass of 2-Pass VBR to the Cache or to your Hard disk so if you do not have a Lot of Disk Space you should Probably save it to your Cache but I think this will Take a Little Longer in the encodeing time, and saveing to your Hard drive is a Little Faster...The First Pass Info gets automaticly deleted after encodeing has Finnished.....Cheers
I look in c: emp and I can see files vbr_3.tmp and vbr_4.
These files are "both in use" (I have an encode running)
I have a checkmark in 'save analyzing result of
multipass vbr to cache'
These seem to be the items, but these are produced whether or not I have
a checkmark there.
What is "cache" isn't that the same as disk space?
If you are then convert the JPEG2000 into bitmaps. Load the bitmaps into TMPGEnc and encode.
If you are just trying to view them, then TMPGEnc won't help you any. You need to download a special plug-in or viewwer application to view the images.
For those you don't know, JPEG2000 was released a few years ago and from what I heard it has much better compression than standard JPEG. It is based on wavelet compression. One of the founders of JPEG2000 was on the televison show "The ScreenSavers" on the station TechTV a couple years ago. I have not heard about it since.
I am attempting to turn a movie into a VCD. I loaded the movie, the setting to VideoCD (NTSCFilm) and started the process. 12 hours later the file was over 4 times the original, no sound, seemingly weaker quality, and after the end of the movie it continued to run for another 3 hours (extended well beyond where the original movie ends). Can anyone tell me what I did wrong? I used Gspot to confirm things (which is VideoCD (NTSCFilm)), but I was unaware that I needed to do anything else to it (the tutorial I read made no mention of anything else). Can anyone enlighten me on what I did wrong? I used WinDVD to see if the file was ok, but, like I said, has all the symptoms I mentioned above, and is almost 4 gigs in size (so not likely to fit on less than 4 cds). Any help would be GREATLY appreciated!
You say it is 4 times bigger. This sounds correct if your source is MPEG-4 (Divx, Xvid, etc) and you are converting to MPEG-1. MPEG-4 is much more efficient so you can fit the full movie on 1 cd.
It sounds like you are trying to convert a Divx file (perhaps one you downloaded since you are having sounds problems and the 23.97 (film) frames per second).
The size of the original is 690mb, the new version is 3.9 gigs. Not even 4 cds could hold that. As well, the movie doesn't end at its appointed time...it continues on for 3 hours after that. No sound at any point and extended 3 hours (which is two times the size of the movie; only an hour and a half movie). So, I am thinking there is a problem with the settings.
I don't mind splitting it between two cds, but over 4 cds with no sound?! That is why I am asking if I did something incorrectly. Which I obviously did. I read a bunch of threads and TMPGEnc is only suppose to double the size of the file (which I knew and accepted), which is why I know there is a problem.
According to Gspot, some of the specifics of this movie include:
type: OpenDML AVI
FPS: 23.97
running time: 01:40:24 (though, the new mpeg that TMPGEnc made is 04:36:00)
Any advice on how to make this convert properly would be appreciated.
The Extra Amount of Blank Video at the end Can be edited out useing the "Merge & Cut" and if you use the Source Range and set the Beginning and end Piont of the file it should not do that anymore...If you are Makeing a Standard VCD the File size should be about 10mb per Minute of Video...And the Reason why you did not get any audio is Probably because the audio in your AVI file is of a Format that Tmpgenc Can not Natively Decode, Like either AC3 or VBR Mp3...You should Extract the audio from your AVI file to WAV format and use the Wav file as the Audio source in Tmpgenc, You can use Virtual Dub for this But I find it easier to use a Little Utility called "Decompress.exe" which will turn your AVI file with Compressed audio into an AVI with Uncompressed audio which Tmpgenc will Happily encode....Good Luck
how long is your movie (in minutes).
Did you choose an svcd template or vcd ?
A vcd can only hold 80 minutes or so, because the bitrate is fixed.
SVCD bitrate is variable, so a 50 minute movie *may* fix on
an svcd, or may not. It depends what the average bitrate of the SVCD is.
If the encode seems to going "off the end", it could be a problem with
the audio. Are you encoding a AVI? If so, download virtyaldub, open the
avi and set audio to "direct stream copy" and select file/sav wav.
If the wav is VBR and virtualdub will tell you, tmpgenc has problems
with it, and you have to use something else to convert it eith to an
uncpmpressed WAV file, of a CBR mp3.
Dave
"there's no such things as a vbr wav"
Not strictly speaking, no, but vitualdub will save the vbr mp3 with a
WAV header, and it gives it a WAV file name.
I got a SVCD movie with nearly double height and half width frame after TMPGEnc-ing my DV(avi) movie. And the left edge of frame is squeezed. Can anyone tell me how to sovle this problem? My DV(avi) source is 720x480. SVCD is set to 480x480 NTSC. The DV(avi) file was captured from JVC DV using MGI StudioWave.
You need to play back the SVCD with a player that will adjust the aspect ratio. Sometimes windows media player will play it back in 480X480 (square) resulting in tall skinny people, the effect you described. If you play it back using DVD software, like WinDVD or PowerDVD, or your home player it will adjust the aspect ratio making it 4:3 instead of 1:1.
When you encode DV to SVCD make sure you select "Full Screen", If you choose "Center" you will loose the edges.
I have certain mpeg1(*.mpg) files recorded in (640x480) output for PAL tv, recorded via sony cybershot.I woud like to improve the brightness in someof them and save them,woud be burning them to a VCD (PAL).I have nero 5.5 and pixela's Imagemixer1.5.1,Imagemi..can only crop the file but has no movie enhancement features and it can also change the files to VCD(*.dat) format.
Will TMPEencd improve the brightness ? I could then save it in my image mixer folder
and burn the files.I have Win98SE and also Direct X9.0b,read somewhere on this BB that direct X9.0b caused problems.Please help
Thank you
Ak.
I don't think you'll be playing those files on any TV if you intend to use a DVD player.
640x480 is not an accepted standard for VCD,SVCD or DVD, so you will have to re-encode to the right format first.
As for the answer to your question:
Load your file then in the main window of TMPG click the 'Setting' button then click the 'Advanced' tab and finally double click the 'Simple color correction' filter.
I get the same problem, converting a DIVX_5.11 file to NTSC DVD format.
Although the History mentions this problem was fixed some versions ago,
it still remains. I've tried setting aside a >4GB NTFS temp directory
under Tools->Environment but that didn't help...though I don't think
file size is a problem since the original clip is only 1GB.
Please can anyone tell me how to download the older versions such as
2.512.52.161 ? I can't find it in the downloads page.
I was wondering if there was any way to calculate the size of the output MPEG? The original AVI is 223.5MB and I was thinking of putting 3 to each CD-R (700MB/80min). So far, I am encoding it all at SVCD resolution have a quality of 70%. I was wondering if it was possible to do at least 1 episode at 80%? Or maybe 75%?
First off, if you choose to set the quality of the mpeg in % rather than a actual bitrate this will make calculating harder. Secondly a VCD at standard bitrate (1150kbps) will allow u to put 80mins of movie on 1 cd, a SVCD at standard bitrate (2520kbps) will allow you to put 40 mins of movie on 1 cd. Finally if you have a avi of 200 odd mb you will be unable to determin how many of these file will fit on a cd after converting to VCD or SVCD. You will need to know the length of the movie, not the size, size is only relevant to the quality of the movie and not how many you can fit on a cd, in MPEG form that is...
Well, I'm making a custom VCD. It is resolution 480x480 only it is MPEG1, VCD format. The bitrate is Constant Quality. The original AVI file is about 24 minutes long.
Get yourself a Bitrate calculator it will tell you what bitrate to use for the length of a Movie so it turns out a certain Size..But with Constant Quality there is no reliable way to determine File size....
Hello, i am wondering what the "output yuv data as basic ycbci not ccir601" option is for or rather what it does under special setting in the matrix tab. Also what is best to use for dvd default or mpeg standard ?.
Do I need to use the "output bitstream for edit (closed gop)" for dvd mpegs.
>Hello, i am wondering what the "output yuv data as basic ycbci not ccir601" option is for or rather what it does under special setting in the matrix tab
Don't bother with this setting. It is to set the output color space level for your MPEG. YCBCI is basically for monitors and CCIR601 is the standard color space for TV.
>Also what is best to use for dvd default or mpeg standard ?
MPEG standard.
>Do I need to use the "output bitstream for edit (closed gop)" for dvd mpegs
No, it is not advisable to do so either unless you are creating multiangle DVD's.
>I am remuxing tmpgs mpeg2 streams back into a dvd using ifoedit and was just wondering what settings are best.
You cannot do this properly with IFOedit, it doesn't work unless you re-encode with REMPEG. If you try it with any other encoder it will simply produce jerky playback.
If you want to merge re-encoded MPEGs with the original menus and extras then you will have to build the VOBS first with IFOedit then use IFOupdate to merge them back with the rest of the VOBs.