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I'm on the AW 5 trial version, but hopefully can get an answer here. I'm editing a blu-ray project that's about 104 minutes long. The audio ends at about 100 minutes although the video continues and the original .ts file has the sound.
Is it possible to have full importation SUP/IFO support in both Video Mastering Works and Authoring works. Noticed that WTV and TS DVB subtitles do not correctly display in certain situations i.e. wrong placement and colors. Correct handling of DVB subtitles can be achieved using ProjectX demux function.
I got the same problem with the DVB Subtitle as well, when try to render the TS file to any format, the subtitle will display on the left middle, instead of bottom. Any Solution or could fix that please? Thanks
I just upgraded from TMPGEnc Authoring Works 4, to 5, verson 5.0.8.26 to be exact.
I tried opening an MKV file I have, it fails. The MKV has a V_MPEG4/ISO/AVC video stream, a DTS audio stream, and a UTF8 subtitle track. No matter what I do, it will not open it. I uninstalled FFDshow and the Haali splitter, it opened it but there's no audio imported.
Probably has to do with the DTS audio stream since that's not natively supported.
Check this previous reply from a user named Persen for a possible solution:
>I was already using Haali Media Splitter and FFDSHOW for another video software and for better decoding of .ts files, but found out that using them for decoding in TAW-5, i also had gotten DTS support.
>Preferences => Input/output format list => File input plug-in
Here i removed every marker, EXCEPT from the one in DirectShow file reader.
>Now when ever i open a MKV file in TAW-5, my Haali Media Splitter and FFDSHOW loads and makes it possible for TAW-5 to decode DTS audio.
>So, just install Haali Media Splitter plus FFDSHOW and change the decoding in TAW-5 and you get DTS decoding.
>Note: Output is not done in DTS though, this is done as Dolby Digital.
I unchecked all the filters in the File Input Plug-in section, except for DirectShow File Reader, it still hangs. The only way for it to import an MKV is to uninstall FFDshow & Haali, but then I don't get audio.
Just tried it again, literally a fresh install of Windows. Installed Windows, drivers, FFDshow x86, Haali Matroska Splitter, then finally TAW5. Rebooted, ran TAW5, went to File Input Plug-in and disabled everything except DirectShow File Reader, restarted TAW5, chose the MKV and it hung again with the wait mouse pointer. I'm going to ask for a refund, V4 worked fine using this procedure.
Here's an odd scenario, when FFDshow & Haali is installed and using TAW4, if all the TAW4 plug-ins are disabled *it* will hang too when loading an MKV. If I enable those plug-ins it'll load the MKV fine. No matter what I do, I can't get an MKV to load into TAW5 successfully, video and audio, even with FFDshow & Haali installed.
One thing that can be an ussue, is that the MKV has not been created propperly. I have on a few occations run in to poorly created MKV's on the web, who at first seemed to be OK when playing them on my computer with a media player, but showed problems when trying to open them in video editors or just trying to stream them with my WD TV Live.
These files i was forced to recode with HDConvertToX to fix the coding problems that the original creator of the MKV file had created with his software, who obviously has bugs.
It was the only software who could fix them because of the way that software works with extracting both video and audio to individual files and then use those to create a brand new propperly encoded video file.
I found the cause for an MKV video to lock-up when importing it, it's the Nvidia graphics driver at fault.
My setup is Window's 7 x64, ffdshow x86, Haali Matroska splitter and TAW5. Consistently I would import an MKV and it would lock-up. After re-installing Window's a few times, I discovered it worked when I hadn't installed any graphics driver from Nvidia (for my GeForce 520 card).
I installed "GeForce 301.42 - WHQL", the latest driver as of this post, then TAW5 would freeze. When I rolled back to driver "GeForce 296.10 Driver - WHQL", it worked fine and no longer locked-up.
I don't know what the root cause is, whether it's something Nvidia is doing, or if TAW5 is to blame, but rolling back to an earlier graphics driver "fixes" it.
I use this software mainly to move videos between PC and DVD-RAM in either direction. I download videos in various formats to burn onto DVD-RAM, but as I do this only rarely I keep forgetting the exact procedure. I know I have to
(1) use the Editor to read in the video,
(2) convert it into some other format, and then
(3) use the VRCopy output option to add the converted file into an existing/empty DVD-RAM.
What I can never remember properly is the second stsge - conversion. Can anyone enlighten me?
Hi, there is already a publication schedule for authoring works 5 german version ? The English version was published on 13/03/2012. That's now been 10 weeks ago ...
I have installed the NVidia 301.42 drivers. On using TMPGEnc Authoring Works 4, I get an error code of 0x80070057 when trying to edit the file. I cannot progress from that point.
On uninstalling the 301.42 drivers and going back to the 296.10 drivers, all is well again with no errors at all.
It seems then that the 301.42 drivers are at fault in this situation. Is opinion too? Do you have any advice, fixes etc to offer?
Thank you for reading this question.
Regards,
Steve
I contacted NVidia, sent them the logs. They replied that it wasn't going to be fixed yet, but hopefully in a future driver update. Until then, I'll use 296.10.
I bought and install the software Mastering Works 5 only to realise it does not work and warning that it cannot find TImageDataSplash_enDataModule and shortly another pop up says MPEG Stream (%s)|%s).
kindly assist or i required an refund, afterall it is not a 20 software, i paid 99 bucks for it.
I have exactly the same problem. Please let me know if you find a solution - I've tried reinstalling, repairing, downloading again and still no success :-(
From a series of trials, details following, it appears that if the project files require a full encode, taking the project size to DL media/ more than 25gb in size, the project codes but is impossible to then burn.
Projects/ the codes were.
First project.
6 x 1080p DTS converted to lpcm, full encode, project size 47Gb.
Crashes ImgBurn/ Nero. Used TDK and Sony discs
Second project
First three files from project 1, project size 23GB
Burns with no problems.
Third project.
Second three files from project 1, project size 23.5GB
Burns with no problems.
Fourth Project.
Random selection of three files from project 1, project size 23GB
Burns with no problems.
Fifth Project.
Ripped Blu Ray.
No recode required, project size 45GB
Burns with no problems.
I found some tests about the brands you are using. Tests how ever are done more than a year ago and is about their BD25 discs.
http://blog.consumerpla.net/2011/02/blu-ray-media-sony-disks-review.html
In this test they mention that Sony began outsourcing their media to low quality manufacturers and that you have to read the MID to make sure that they actually are 100% Sony produced.
For safety reasons because of this, i do not reccomend using their media any more, since there can be duds between them.
http://blog.consumerpla.net/2011/02/blu-ray-media-tdk-disks-review.html
Test do sound promissing, but who knows if TDK not has done the same as Sony now, with outsourcing the production to a low quality manufacturer.
Lots of the old brands are no longer being produced by them selves, but by low quality manufacturers.
What i use: Verbatim
I have always used media from them, both CD, DVD and BD and have never had problems with their media. All my Blu-ray projects has also been burned well, but i have how ever never gone as high as 47GB, only about 45GB.
The disc used were all genuine, have learnt from past, bad, experiences ALWAYS to use good discs.
Really am reach the end of any sensible routes as they are, about the only things it could be now is either;
1) a problem with my burner, but it's still running/ burning fine other projects
or
2) the joys of a windows issue which my specific set up.
Think I might try the system rebuild first, while being a pain, doesn't cost much to do. If that doesn't help, I'll have to look at a new burner and see if that resolves the issue.
What is bugging me is that Author V4, still works fine, bar the fact that I can only get 4 parts on a disc rather than the possible 6 with Author V5????
If it turns out to the the burner it self who causes problems, then try to look at what Plextor is offering.
I am using their old PX-B940SA, the worlds first 12x BD burner. Expensive burner back when it was released, but it has never caused me problems.
Just an update to let you know I have I solved this problem!
After the rebuild and then a huge amount of reading, I have found that there is a possible (To keep me on the right side of microsoft!) problem with Windows 7 64 Bit, ONLY if you attempt to burn DL media.
It seems that if you have the right set of drives, you can not burn DL media, but can happily burn SL media. Here is the fun bit, this appears to vary from PC build to PC build and so the driver set on the specific build. So you can have two PCs which are exactly the same, bar say their audio card/ video card/ HD controllers etc. One will work and the other not!
I rebuild my system using Window 7 32 Bit and is running fine.
Okay I have located the fix. Here's is how you do it.
Load a test AVI file.
Go to "options" tab in upper right hand corner
Go to preferences
Clip on File input plug-in
Un-Check Media Foundation file reader
I understand TAW5 can read TVMW5 as input file source. Apparently, TAW ignores the Format (output) section of the TVWM5 project, it only uses the Edit (input) stage to feed the source file into TAW5, am I right ?
If this is true, is there a way to have TAW5 use the OUTPUT of TVMW5, and have the projects automatically "chained" together. Rationale: TVMW5 has finer advanced encoder settings than TAW5.
Of course, this chaining can be done "manually", but requires (a little) user intervention.
I have a 1 hour 1080i/50 movie that I want both as computer file (MP4 to be played on media player box) and as disc to be played in a standard Bluray player (AVCHD disc compatible). For efficiency reasons (encoding times etc.), I would like to encode only once the source video as high-quality MPEG4 AVC.
I encoded using TVMW5 and ended up with a 7 GB, 14 Mbps CBR MP4 file (audio & interlaced video). The file plays nicely on computers and my media player box, but when I tried to make an AVCHD DVD disk from this file, I was surprised to see, at the output stage, TAW5 merrily transcoding the whole video (settings are set to video smart rendering). (Note: I decided to try an AVCHD DVD dual-layer disk instead of a BD-R disc, as the file size and overall bitrate are within specs).
Question 1: Is there a way to check file compliance for lossless authoring at an earlier stage than the output stage (where considerable time has already been spend fine-tuning chapters, menus, etc...) ?
Question 2: I assume there is something in my TVMW5-encoded MP4 AVC file that makes it non-AVCHD compliant (it is not completely clear to me what makes the difference between MPEG4 AVC and AVCHD, as long as some basic constraints are respected); what could it be ? here is the Mediainfo data:
General
Complete name : G:\XXX\2011.mp4
Format : MPEG-4
Format profile : Base Media / Version 2
Codec ID : mp42
File size : 6.77 GiB
Duration : 1h 11mn
Overall bit rate mode : Variable
Overall bit rate : 13.5 Mbps
Movie name : 2011
Performer : Me
Writing application : TMPGEnc Video Mastering Works 5 Version. 5.2.3.66
>
>Question 1: Is there a way to check file compliance for lossless authoring at an earlier stage than the output stage (where considerable time has already been spend fine-tuning chapters, menus, etc...) ?
Sorry I had to RTFM first...I have the answer to this question now :-)
>Question 2: I assume there is something in my TVMW5-encoded MP4 AVC file that makes it non-AVCHD compliant (it is not completely clear to me what makes the difference between MPEG4 AVC and AVCHD, as long as some basic constraints are respected); what could it be ?
reading the manual further, I think I found again the explanation myself: in the BD presets for MPEG4/AVC, max GOP length is 25, while in my initial MPEG4/AVC encoding, the default "non BD compliant" setting of 300 was used...
So remains this more general question: BD-compliant max GOPs are much smaller than for generic MPEG4/AVC files; I would suspect this would cause some quality decrease for identical bitrate (or higher bitrate for a given quality). Hence, does it make sense to have one set of MPEG4/AVC encoding settings for 2 uses: computer/Mediaplayer box on one hand and home BD player on the other ?
You should use TVMW5's AVCHD or Blu-ray output template if you want it to smart render in TAW5.
Whether the GOP makes a difference is up to your personal preference. If you can't tell the difference in quality, or if the difference is minimal, then I would just go with BD/AVCHD compliant.