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Ok. Here's my problem. First off, I have used this program numerous times to sucsessfully convert an .avi video to .mpg video for burning to a VCD. I never had a problem with video or audio conversion in the final resulting file. Now hpwever, I'm trying to encode (Samurai Jack Episodes) so I can put them to DVD at my friends house. I have so fae unsucsessfully gotten a complete video and audio render to mpg. I have tried three or four different ways that would possibly solve the problem. 1.) tried decompressing audio, then used the decompressed audio video source. 2.) used the original .avi file. , 3.) used a .wav of the audio and .avi for video. I'm pretty possitive it needs to be in NTSC format. Could I be Wrong?
So your Problem is that you have no Video in your Mpeg file Right??? This problem can usually be fixed by going to "Options" to "Enviromental settings" to "Vfapi Plugins" and Raise the "Direct Show" to "2", this should make it to there is a Picture in the file the next time you encode, There will only be a Picture in the file if you can see a Picture in the Tmpgenc screen while encodeing....
Thanks for the tip. I'll try it out. However when I posted this problem I was getting a video picture in the picture box while encoding. Maybe your tip will fix the problem for the finished file. Also, I would like an explanation about some of the features, (i.e., The Quantinization Matrix: Will changing some things bring out better quality? etc). Again, Thanks for your help
You should leave the Quantize Matrix on the Default matrix unless you have your own matrix that you can just copy into the Boxes...If you have a Clean good Quality Source file then it is best to not use any Filters and just use standard settings but if your Source file isn"t of the Highest Quality you would then have to determine what aspects of the video need improovment and try to find a Filter that corelates with it, Like if your Source file is a Little Blurry then you might try the sharpen filter, or if it has a Bit of Noise then you would try the noise filter , you can also brighten the image and do color correction ect..the Filters really slow down the encodeing so it is good to use the Filters from Virtual Dub or AVISynth and Frameserve the file to Tmpgenc...Cheers
>Thanks for the tip. I'll try it out. However when I posted this problem I was getting a video picture in the picture box while encoding. Maybe your tip will fix the problem for the finished file. Also, I would like an explanation about some of the features, (i.e., The Quantinization Matrix: Will changing some things bring out better quality? etc). Again, Thanks for your help
DONT mess with matrix settings unless you know what you are doing. For better quality stick to raising the bitrate and resolution. If you want explanations about matrix's look around the net. They are far too complicated a subject to explain here.
The next time you encode click the preview option to check the image before you encode.
I am taking mpegs off my tivo to save to dvd for my collection. Basically I was recommened to use tmpgenc to clean up the video...ie to remove a green bar on the left side of the picture and noise (closed caption) from the top. I input the mpg file, it cleans it up just like I want, but then it splits the file into 2 parts: video and audio (wav). I can't seem to find out how to make it stop doing that. I don't want 2 files. I tried to muliplex them back as one file but the program complains that it can't do that to pcm audio.
1) Is there a way to get tmpge to clean up the video without spliting up the file?
Tmpgenc Makes 2 seperate Files when encodeing for DVD Because you Need 2 seperate Files in Most DVD authoring Programs, and there is No way to Join Mpeg video and Wav audio unless you Join them in your DVD authoring Program, What I would sugest to do is to Encode the Wav audio to AC3(Dolby Digital) then Load Both files into your DVD authoring Program then Author them to DVD like you would with Any DVD..But you might be useing one of those Really low end DVD authoring Programs like a Few of the Cheaper Ulead Programs that will only accept Mpeg files if they have Mpeg 1 layer 2 audio in them, In that case I would get a Better DVD authoring Program but if you can"t then you will have to encode the Wav audio to Mpeg1 Layer 2 audio(You can do this with Tmpgenc)Then use the "Multiplexor" to Join the Mpeg audio with the Mpeg video then Author it to DVD with your DVD authoring Program.....
You choose the wrong option, Instead of selecting 'CBR linear PCM audio' choose 'CBR MPEG1 LayerII audio (MP2)'
In anycase it is not necessary to re-encode the audio. The audio is already in the correct Mp2 format. Simply encode the video only.
After setting up the wizard uncheck 'start encoding immediately' then select 'Video only' and encode.
When done load the re-ecoded video into the Video field of the 'simple multiplexer' in the TMPG MPEGtools and load your TIVO MPEG into the audio field of the 'simple multiplexer'. If You are intending to author this to DVD then select the 'stream type' as 'MPEG-2 program(VBR)' then click run.
Big draw back with creating menus. DVD Author allows the user to set a font for all items in the menu but doesn't allow a user setting for font size and color that can be applied to all chapter numbers and chapter descriptions within a project. The same limitation can be found in menu settings like "previous" "next" "chapter menu" and "play track".
It's very tedious changing each of these individually. Is there a quicker method? Why not add more user defined settings?
I am using DVDX as a file server to TMPGenc through the premiere video server. DVDx gives a too much sample error which means I have to force 24Hz frame rate(although the supposed output frame rate is 29.997fps). When I then set the encode fps in TMPGenc to 29.97 the audio and video go out of sync as the movie progresses. I am tryng to make an MPEG1 VCD. Should I use the 3:2 pulldown in the advanced setting of TMPGenc? When I tried this the video quality seemed to get worse. What do you think I should do? Thanks for your help.
In this Case you should Just encode it in Tmpgenc as a 24fps File because VCD can use 24fps, It is called "NTSC Film" ..But if you can you should Try to Load the File directly into Tmpgenc because if you are forceing it to be 24fps it can cause sync Problems....
I am trying to make the VCD be playable on a regular TV. If I encode at 24 fps I may get that strobing effect, since the TV wants 29.97 fps. Does the DVD player perform a pull up/down? I am not sure if the DVD player will correct the fps without some flags or something? Thanks for your help.
I forgot to add some more info. Last night I tried the to use the 3:2 pulldown in the TMPEGenc advanced tab and still got audio sync problems. The software also locked up on both my attempts at the same location (after many hours of encoding) in the DVD. One attempt was with no pullup-down, and one attempt was with pullup-down. I am not sure it the two problems are related. If I encoded at 23.997 FPS is there another piece of software I can use to make it 29.997 fps for my TV? Thanks for your help.
I'm not surprised your having problems doing it the crazy way you are.
There is only one true way to frameserve to TMPG and is the best, fastest and most tried and trusted method there is.
Don't bother with silly programs like DVDX. Do it like a professional not an amatuer!
Get yourself Smartripper, DVD2AVI and TMPG.
Simply rip the VOBS from the DVD to your hard drive using Smartripper then load the VOBS into DVD2AVI then in DVD2AVI click 'File', select 'Save project' and hey presto in minutes you have a d2v file and a wav you can easily load into TMPG and encode.
Simple as that.
If you have any problems using this process such as no audio then just post back and we'll tell you what to do to cure it.
What I"m telling you Is that your DVD Player does NOT want 29.97fps when it comes to VCD ,The VCD Standard allows for 23.97fps(24) NTSC Film and it Will Play Fine, You will only get a "Strobeing Effect" with Interlaced material and it will NOT happen with a NTSC Film VCD...I would Say that if you were useing Mpeg2 then you could Use something like "DoPulldown" to add Pulldown Flags to the file But Mpeg1 doesn"t support this, So don"t worry about It as 23.97fps(24fps) is Fully VCD Compliant and it will Play Just fine As Most Poeple actually use this Frame rate with VCD"s because the Lower Frame rate means that there are More Bits for each Frame which will Produce a Better Quality VCD ...
I AM A PATHETIC LOSER NOT EVEN WORTHY OF POSTING. THANK YOU MASTER MINION AND ASHY FOR CORRECTING ME. (no really thanks for your help. I'll write back if i have problems)
Well that can happen if when you opened the Save File dialog you had it set to "All files" and didn"t put a Mpg extention at the End..Is the File the Right size??? Cuz all you would have to do is Rename the File to File.mpg and it should work....
You Need to Use a DVD authoring Program so you can set the Menu"s, Chapters and Titles..You can"t Just burn the Files to a DVD-R you have to set up the DVD"s Structure so that you can Navigate the DVD, Like with Retail DVD"s.But one thing you should do is Encode the Wav audio file to AC3 audio or even Mp2 audio because Wav takes up a LOT of Valuable Disk space that would be better used for Increasing the Video bitrate....There are LOT"s of DVD authoring Programs But I don"t think any of them are Free, The One I use often when I need to Make a Simple Basic DVD is one called "DVD-Lab" it is Really simple To Use and it will also let you author SVCD and VCD Files to DVD-R, you can Download a Fully Working 30 day Demo version here: http://www.mediachance.com/dvdlab/ ,And Of cource you can Use Tmpgenc DVD author which you can download By Clicking the Banner Below ,I personally like DVD Lab better, and there are a Bunch of Ulead DVD authoring Programs that you can download demo"s for at http://www.ulead.com/ ..and there are Many Many more...good Luck
Hi,
I just wanted to know, what is the maximum bitrate possible with mpeg1 format? Today I encoded 3000kbps, but my 10sec video seemed like 24sec in media player. If I don't exceed 1500kbps, everything is ok. To make my bitrate settings, I am text editing .mcf files.
Try keeping it between 400 and 2700 kbs. The maximum bitrate depends on how fast your CD-R spins in the player. The general max is about 2600 kbs I read somewhere. Keep this in mind if you want to exchange CD-R's with others.
If the bitrate
Forget about the time display in your DVD player. My DVD player never tells me the right time. I use modified MoleVCD mpeg1 templates. The Time display is always to slow. But who cares?
MPEG1 bitrate for what?
There is no limit for MPEG1 itself, do you mean for VCD?
for VCD the limit in the standard is 1150kb/s, but this can be higher depending on your player.
As the previous poster pointed out it mostly depends how on the drive speed of your player. Here we are talking about set top DVD players.
Your PC should be having no trouble playing this MPEG unless you have a very slow machine. Besides media player is crap for MPEG1 and MPEG2 playback. You would be better advised to use a real MPEG player such as WinDVD which in my opinion is the best there is.
Why are you altering the bitrate with a text editor in the template?
It is much simpler to just change the bitrate in the program after loading the template.
Also when you raise the bitrate there are other factors to take into account too.
For instance a higer bitrate will need a higher VBV setting. You should set the VBV buffer to 112 not 40 as it is in the MPEG1 VCD standard.
I'm not sure where to post feature requests but anyway..
I have a lot of files on my computer that need to be encoded, and I don't have the time to leave the computer on continously to do it. I was wondering if there could be some sort of Pause option, or an external solution that provides one so that you could pause the encoding process, turn the computer off and then resume it later. It might not be possible but it would be handy for time consuming jobs with filters and when you are encoding with the highest quality motion search setting. For those non-urgent encodes, this option might make it more feasable to encode high quality movies.
This can already be done in a roundabout way.
Click stop then hibernate your computer. When your computer resumes just cancel the abort and the encoding will continue.
If that method works I can't argue. I just thought the hibernation process might screw up the encoding, but if the abort dialog box pauses processing then that's good I guess.
Well Nok. It means the machine is put into a standby state in which everything is still loaded, but it isn't doing anything. Most modern computers will do is and there are usually Sleep and Wake buttons to handle this. However, some of us find cats walking over them, accidentally pressing them or problems with some bit of hardware or software making the use of this feature a bit of an annoyance. And of course, older machines can't do it anyway.
Imho, programs like TMPGEnc should never rely on the machine having a feature to do this sort of thing. It might work, but it isn't certain or even available for 'everyone'.
>Well Nok. It means the machine is put into a standby state in which everything is still loaded, but it isn't doing anything. Most modern computers will do is and there are usually Sleep and Wake buttons to handle this. However, some of us find cats walking over them, accidentally pressing them or problems with some bit of hardware or software making the use of this feature a bit of an annoyance. And of course, older machines can't do it anyway.
NO. This NOT what hibernate means.
Hibernating your machine and putting it into standby are different actions.
When you hibernate your PC everything that was in memory at the time is stored on to the hard disk then the PC shuts down NOT go into sleep mode, so it can't be activated by your cat unless it knows how to boot your machine up.
When the machine is booted the exact state of the machine will be resumed prior to the computer shutdown.
This option is available on most machines which aren't archaiclly old and have the required BIOS and with operating systems Windows Me, XP, 2000. You should find the option under Power option in the Control panel.
If it;s not there it could be because one of your hardware devices is preventing it. Maybe a modem, usually the wave driver serwave.vxd. Look in NOHIBER.txt for info and disable that device.
Sorry Ashy. Didn't know this distinction. It sort of makes the stupid Sleep/Wake buttons even more useless though.. In any case, having to disable some bit of hardware to use it is not user friendly. If someone had to use that Technique to generate an image in something like POVRay, no one would use it. Like with AlexKara's situation, thing done in it can take a long time. Sometimes a 'single' frame can take hours to generate if it uses radiosity and a lot of reflecting and refracting objects. A less 'roundabout' way would be a lot more useful in my opinion.
I guess I'm glad that the feature seems like a good idea. Also hibernation has a lot of problems even with the new systems so I figured it would be a good idea (considering how buggy it can sometimes be).
A less roundabout way would be a better alternative :)
I agree hibernation can be buggy on some systems or should I say just tempermental. In earlier days when I had Windows ME instead of XP the hibernate tab would sometimes just disappear which meant I usually had to alter something in the registry to get it back, but I can't quite remember what now.
The menu templates appear to be stored in *.tme files located in the "templates" subdirectory within the DVD Author directory.
I have opened these files in a text editor but I could not edit them with any success.
Can these files be edited? What is used to create the inital menu templates? Once a few more examples are available it will help eliminate the biggest complaint with this program... the menu choices are terrible.
I do like the program compared to others... I just need different menu choices.
hi how come im getting no sound on any of my avi's that im trying to put into mpeg when i go to source range there are no spikes on the audio line anywhere?. But i can play the avi perfect any clues?
Thanks
I bet, the AVIs are using Sound-Formats TMPGEnc can not decode.
You can try to raise to Priority of the DirectShow VFAPI-PlugIn in TMPGEnc. An other Way ist to use VirtualDubMOD to decode the Audio-Part to WAV first.
This error is Caused by an error in your AVI file, Usually a Corrupted Frame(s), It is Very Common with files Downloaded off of the Net, There is No gaurantee that you will be able to fix the file but you can try, You can try a program like "divX Fix" or "DivX Anti-Freeze" or you can try Useing Virtual Dub to scan for errors then make a Direct stream Copy of the File and the errors should be masked but it doesn"t allways work....good Luck
That Doesn"t Matter, Media Players are Made to Skim over errors But an encoder has to analize each and every Frame and if even one of those frames has an error in it the Encoder will error out...This error gets Posted Quite often here so I know that is what your Problem is....
Every time I encode anything that takes more than about 5 minutes to encode I get read errors or the pc re-boots. I have used TMPG for for the past year with no problems until about a month ago.
I have even formatted my hard drive and re-installed and still get read errors or the pc shutting down and reveiving the message 'your system is recovering from a serious error' the error message it then sends microsoft is to do with :
At the minute i am getting around this by encoding small parts of files at a time but this is an real inconvenience. I am running on XP and Athlon 2.4 with 1024 DDR ram.
I Don"t know exactly what your Problem is, But there are a Few things you can try ,First make sure your Hard drive is allways Defragmented, and go to "Options" to "Enviromental Settings" to "CPU" and Make sure that the "SSE-2" Box is NOT Checked as Athlons CPU"s do not properly support the SSE-2 Optimization ..and Make sure you have a Lot of space on the Drive were the mpeg file will be encoded to..And make sure that you aren"t only getting this error with a Particular file you are trying to encode, Try a Bunch of files and see if you get the problem with every file, and if all else fails you can allways use a Different mpeg encoder, for Mpeg1 encodeing I would sugest useing MainConcept Encoder or Canopus Procoder and for Mpeg2 I would sugest CCE SP 2.67...good Luck
I just got this error as well, and in the error report it said that the system used was windows NT 5.1 ? is this what my pc thinks its running ? if it is no wonder I am getting errors as i am on XP
What type of file were you encodeing in Tmpgenc when you got this error?? Was it a WMV File?? and No your PC doesn"t think it is Running Win NT 5.1, I get simular errors at times mentioning Win NT, I think it is because Win XP is Based on Win NT....
But i normally encode form AVI or mpg tp VCD and always get read errors when encoding for longer than about 5 minutes at a time. I have the output file just going to my C drive which always has about 50 gig spare. Could it be creating a temporary file that that is bigger than some settings allows ?
Also when you said about the options enviromental settings, do you now were they are in XP.
Could this type of thing be being caused by a cloash between amd, xp and ndivia drivers as some people have said this can happen ?
The Settings I told you in the Enviromental settings are for Every Windows, These settings are In Tmpgenc so they are the same For every one, I suppose that your Nvidia Drivers could be a Problem But I have No first hand Knowlege in this department ..If all else Fails you can allways Use a Different encoder, there are a few that will Produce simular Quality as Tmpgenc and Most are Much faster at encodeing, If you are doing Mpeg1 VCD I would sugest useing the "Mainconcept Encoder" and For Mpeg i would sugest CinemaCraft encoder SP 2.67 , it is a Better encoder for Mpeg2 that tmpgenc But it is More complicated to use...Cheers
I just got this error as well, and in the error report it said that the system used was windows NT 5.1 ? is this what my pc thinks its running ? if it is no wonder I am getting errors as i am on XP
NT 5.1 is Windows XP. NT 5.1 is the core of Windows XP.
Search your PC for sysdata.xml and open it and look for the the error which is causing the problem.
Also make sure you have installed the latest drivers for your Motherboard.
I doubt it has anything to do with the NVIDIA drivers, but AMD processor sytems are renowned for these types of problems.