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I"m really starting to get pissed off here,every movie I encode with "tmpgenc" I end up with a audio file that is longer or shorter than the original the same with the video,there fore the two files dont match up,and the sync is really bad ,I have done well over a hundred movies with only one comeing out properly,and another problem I allways get "buffer underflow" error.and the audio allways cuts out,and the video is totally jerkey it looks like every one is break danceing...I know this program inside and out and have tried every possible setting,you would think that out of so many times that I would get it right just out of coinsidance,but no such luck.maybe the authors could work on getting the audio and video to mach up better instead of picture quality cuz what use is a good picture if the audio don"t match up........
I read every post in this forum and answer quite a few to and I know its"t my files cuz you can"t have the same problem with over 100 files....they are all dvd rips..but thanx any way,I think my problem is I am useing seperate audio and video streams and "tmpgenc" cant sync them properly.I need a program that will multipex avi files or rip vob files to avi and merges the video and audio streams...so if any one knows of sutch a program let me know....
I was able to fix it by of-setting the audio track by 1.65 seconds I will have to do this for all the movies but it still gets choppy at high motion parts.........
Why won't TMPGenc accept a 16x9 file that I rendered out of after effects? It's a true 16x9 image, but when i pull it in, it reads it as 1:1. Then when i try to encode it, it gives me some error about it having to be between 8x8 and 4088x4088, and multiple of 8.
Hmm, don't bother with the 16:9 format. I think tmpgenc says 1:1 becaus it will encode it wo 16:9 anyway. If you have a scourc that is widescreen it will be encoded to 1:1 with the black bars anyway.
Just try and encode for a bit and see what it looks like, some of the functions in tmpgenc are a bit strange to understand, don't get to worryd about them.
NTFS can only be used in Win2K and XP you can not use it in win98 , I'm not shure about millenium or NT...If your running 98 you can install 2000 as a secon OS on your machine and do a duel boot. thats nice because you can have 98 aswell as 2000. A second HD or additional partition will be nessasary to instal and when you install just select NTFS to partition /format it. Good luck
i just downloaded an avi movie and the pixel size of that movie is 640x272. i just finished converting that avi file to mpg, but it's not the same size as the original avi file that i downloaded. i tried every option in the "source aspect ratio" and "video arrange method", but nothing seems to work. i want the vcd to have the same output size as the avi file, but the conversion files i've been trying just stretches the picture and it doesn't look good. is there any way i can change the video file to 640x272 pixels? please help me...thanks
when makeing "vcd" your aspect ratio gets converted to 352 by 240 so I don"t think you will be able to keep the resolution to look exactly the same but do this and it should help,under the "advanced" screen in "settings" under "video arange method" choose "full screen custon size" and change the settings to
640 by 272 this should work for getting the screen to look the same size as the original......hope this helps....................Sherlock
what is the best settings to use to take a DVD and make it into a VCD? I would also like to know about the GOP structure and what if any changes to make would it do. my home player only supports vcd and xvcd but not svcd.
I've a mpeg file which is about 100 MB and if I play it with Windows Media Player it shows that the mpeg file is 1:38. But the player plays the mpeg file beyond 1:38...Is there any way to fix this size/time difference?
Btw: I tried to convert it with TMPG, but TMPG sees only the first 1:38.
After may weeks I sucessfully burnt my first SVCD. I did this by using TMPGng and the used Mpeg tools to convert it to a VCD (my DVD player does not play SVCD).
I set CBR=2000, interlaced... and at all the ther setting in VCD help.
I use this to make home movies with a JVC DL320U (780 x 480 pixels) capture the AVI file in this format.
I get fuzzy edges to all the high motion frames. Looks awful.. Please can I get some help on how to overcome this.
I am trying to use the TMGEnc program to make VCDs it has been working fine so far and I have made a couple. The problem I am having now is that I have a file .avi that it tells me it cannot read or is not supported. It works fine when I open it normally (the Avi file) and it has the same properties as other files I have used for vcds. Is there anything I can do? Do I need to try to convert it to another type of file?
Please help
Kris
This happens when you are trying to convert an .avi encoded with DivX;).
It is still possible but you have to do the following first:
1. Download and instal VirtuaDub from: >>http://www.virtualdub.org/<<
2. Start Virtualdub. Open your video File->Open video(if you get any warnings just ignore them because you won't edit the video just extract the audio). Select File->File Information and note the fps as the video source fps because you will need it later.
3. Select under Audio->Full processing mode.
Select Audio->Compression and select <No compression (PCM)>
4. Select Audio->Conversion.
Change the the Sampling rate to 44100Hz if you are going to make VCD or SVCD MPEGs.
5. Save the wav by clicking on File->Save WAV...the wav will be a huge audio uncompressed video file(about 10 MB/minute so for this 80 min movie a 800 MB wav file).
6. Start TMPEnc. Press cancel if the Project Wizard comes.
Press BrowseEand select the DivX file as Video source input.
Now you press the Browse button for choosing the Audio source input and use the saved wav file.
7. Press load and load the file which in the Template directory of TMPGenc.
If the video source fps is 29,970 load VideoCD (NTSC).mcf
If the video source fps is 23,970 load VideoCD (NTSCFilm).mcf
If the video source fps is 25,000 load VideoCD (PAL).mcf
If the video source fps is anything else else just load NTSC if you live in US or Japan and PAL if you live anywhere else.
8. Im sure that you know what to do now...
Greetings all BOOZstrikers
MagicWant2Shaq
your problem is simple. I'll assume you got the avi from the net. Download and install Mpeg4 Mp43 Codec. some of the net movies like the ones coming from tmd and smr have a weird encryption code. you can also download avi info that will tell you the encryption compression used on any avi file.
Thanks for the help, I have actually already done all that, the problem comes when I choose the file, the program will not load it and gives me the error that the file will cannot open, or unsupported.
?
GO TO YOUR "ENVIROMENTAL SETTINGS" to "vfapi plugins" and raise your "direct show" to "2" and if this don"t work adjust the "avi compatability reader"...this works 9 times out of 10 for your problem.....hope it helps.....sherlock
Hi Kris.
I hope I can help. Many files downloaded on net say they are avi files but are not true files. Just downloaded panic room and tmpge said file not supported or unknown. This is what to do. Download vitual dub( assume you have it already) Open video file, click video, then full processing mode, click video and select conversion. Now what you want is divx low motion video. Click configure and then click file. Then sav as avi. Name this file so you can recognize it later. It will come up with a warning but has never caused me a problem. Ignore it. After it is finished, open tmpge, select browse and select file you just made as your video source. Then select wav( I assume you made this in virtual dub) Then select load and select format( ntsc, pal, etc)Click on settings, advanced, check source range, double click, put in start and finish frames, ok, ok then start. Good luck. If you use virtual dub, tmpge and vcd easy, it is a winning combo and works great. What you are really doing is using a hack code to bring the video into a format that tmpge will accept.
Or the much quicker, simpler method to preserve quality.
Open your file in Virtualdub. Click file>start frameserver then click start in the box that comes up. Save the file somewhere and give it an avi extension then load that file into TMPG and encode.
SMR, Angel potion and all the other silly codecs that claim are better are all rip offs of Divx or MPEG4 and merely change a few parameters of the file such as the FourCC code and won't give any better quality than good old DiVx so steer clear if you can.
can you help me i have just ripped a film that went ok but when i come to use tmpgenc( i have used both versions) the computer freezes up but not at the same place all the time your help would be very much appreciated
I am trying to export a movie in Premiere 6. It is a collection of stills that I am making an AVI out of (later to encode to Xsvcd).All was fine until recently. When I try to export the movie(Microsoft DV AVI) it gets to frame 133 then I get "error writing movie (disk full?). The disk is not full. Any help would be great !
If you have used the equipment you have now and been sucsessfull lot's of times before it's probably something with the tape. It could be a macrovision thing probably. Maby you need a filter that you put between your VCR and Capturecard in order to filter out the macrovision or maby it's just a copy protection. Try to copy the tape between two VCR's and if the copy is screwed up that's most lightly the problem, some sort of copy protection.
Other than that I don't know but I guess you could go to a stor and have them copy it for you if the quality is degrading and you really need a copy for safe keeping untill you have found a way to capture it to vcd.
I tried Techno theory that Nero accept and apply time scale than just file size.
I captured two dv-avi from 6mm DV CAM tape. Each has 160Mbyte and 620Mbyte size respectively.
And I had 700Mbyte CDR.
I burned them and I had problem with my system. It halted and I had to force rebooting. But I found 160Mbyte and 620Mbyte MPEG-2 on that 700Mbyte cd and the end of SVCD and what I encoded matched, not cut off.
I do not understand how it could happen. But it works.
When burning an (S)VCD you can use the full ~800MB capacity of an 80 Minute Disk. When burning an iso9660 Data CD the missing 100MB are for checksums.
You can find more detailed information at www.vcdhelp.com