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Pegasys Products BBS [ Sorted by thread creation date ]
Ok, Im trying to make a 10min 30sec avi (42mb) into an mpeg with the following settings in TMPGE:
Video
160x120
10 fps
400 bitrate
Audio
441.hz / Joint stereo 64 kbit
The estimated file size for this is 35 mb , but everytime TMPGE finshes converting the avi into the mpeg the file ends up being 107 mbs. How can I fix this, its driving me crazy!
Thanks for your time =)
Who"s estimated file size?"tmpgenc"s estimated file size? ignore "tmpgenc"s estimates, you either cut the bitrate in half( would look like crap,at 400kbs it should look like crap) or accept the fact that your file is 107mb..
Hi I seem to be having a problem with batch encoding. I am ebatch encoding about 5 files at a time. It used to work fine, but all of a sudden once it has finished encoding the fist file it automatically shuts down. Any ideas as to waht could be causing this?
i get the same thing....i'm using xp pro and i cant get it to encode past the first file. the whole program just closes on me. it's done this for numerous versions now and strangly it worked the first time i tried it with the newest version, but now its back to doing the same thing again. if anyone else has the same problem or has fixed this let me know.
You mean you used vcd gear to burn it and the file was to big so it chopped off 15 minutes? what kind of help do you need?do you still have the full file? if you do chop it in half and burn it on 2 disks? you didn"t give me much to go on here some information would be nice.....
First create a TMPGEnc directory where you want the install to go, like under "Program Files".
Or, create multiple ones under individual user accounts and/or work areas so auto-saved default settings don't step on each other. (Templates are easy to copy around)
Execute the downloaded .exe file and it will let you browse over to the directory(ies) you have created and do the unzip for you.
Create a desktop link to the tmpgenc.exe file and give it a better name.
But this is important: 14 days goes real fast and make sure you only purchase through Ifekx, if possible.
for some reason, when i encode a file, it just go slow as hell.
the problem is that it only hapen with this file, i have try other, and it doesn't take nearly as long.
when i go into task manager, what i see there is tmpgenc: not responding. but after every 15 secs or so, it runing again, and then back to not responding.
then when i finally finish encode the file to .mpg (take about 20 hrs) it play for about 15 mins into the movies, then i just stop. the audio keep goin all the way to the end, but the frame freeze all the way.
The problem is that you probably downloaded this file off the "net" and a lot of files that are downloaded from places like "kaaza" are corrupted.There isn"t much you can do accept try to make a copy of the file with "virtua dub" but it might choke on it to...good luck
The audio format in your avi file probably not compatible with "tmpgenc" so extract the audio from your avi file with "virtua dub" and convert it to "wav" and load that file in tmpgenc and encode it then "multiplex" the audio and your video together..
I am capturing with a DC10+ and Pinnacle Studio 7AV software. I am getting an error "can not open or unsupported". Changing the priority of directshow is not working for me. The proper codec must be installed because my windows media player can open the file with no problem. My version is 2.53.35.130. I am running on a Windows 2000, P4, 512Mb Ram.
First thing "media player "uses external codecs,and "tmpgenc" is only compatible with certain types of "dv"it works with "video for windows" and "open dml" but it is best to use un-compressed avi for best quality with "dv"....
If my encoded file (MPEG2 SVCD using tmpgenc) is still to big for a 80min cdr, ¿how I can reduce the size?, ¿maybe re-enconded again?, but how I do that ,if tmpgenc can´t open the MPEG2 file?
you can only get about 45min of svcd/mpeg2 in a 80min disk with any sort of quality,but if you want to get more and don"t care about quality just lower the bitrate, but don"t encode the svcd encode the original avi but if you deleted the avi file, you will have to "de-multiplex" the mpeg2 and load in your files seperately,but I think you will need thw "mpeg2" plugin for "tmpgenc" you can use the "vfapi converter" to turn your svcd into a psudo-avi file and load that into "tmpgenc".....
You can"t with this program but some authoring software will let you do it.Your file size will be huge with "pcm" like over a gig on an 1.5 hour movie, why do you have an avertion to useing mp2 or ac3?
Have you tried "Dolby Digital ac3" it is the format used in most dvd"s?There are some high end authoring programs that allow for "pcm" I"m not totally sure about this but I think "Sonic dvdit PE" allows for pcm but you would have to check it out, but I know "Scenerist" does but You might have to sell your house to buy it, you would have to check out some authoring programs,I don"t think PCM is that common on dvd..
I believe that ULead's DVD Workshop accepts PCM files, but keep in mind that DVDs want 48KHz sample rate vs 44.1KHz or other. The prog is pricey at $300 but you get a 30 day trial period--it has a great built-in encoder BTW.
Compressing via AC3 is very hard to do--you need the $1000 SoftEncode program or <an even more expensive> hardware encoder licensed by Dolby Labs.
When i try to cut a large mpg into two smaller ones, the audio is out of sync by a quarter second, makes for some psychedelic viewing but it's not what i'm going for. Any suggestions?
When I download a pristine quality file and then try to convert from Mpeg4 to MPEG2 I seem to lose a tremendous amount of picture quality...I have had the bitrate as high as 6500 but still it comes out hazy and jerky....Does anyone have a suggestion? I am going from pal 25fps to NTSC 29.97fps and 720X480
> I am going from pal 25fps to NTSC 29.97fps and 720X480
Yeah, and that's wrong... You need to know the exact parameters from the AVI and you must use a REAL PAL-NTSC-Conversation, which TMPGEnc is not able to do. You have to use AviSynth to do that.
By the way: if you convert an DivX-Movie, it's always better to use Half-D1 (352x480) instead auf Full-D1.