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TMPGEnc 2.5 (Free or plus version) BBS [ Sorted by thread creation date ]
I have recently formated and freshly installed win xp pro as my second operating system but in enviromental settings under vfapi i dont see the option for the ligos mpeg2 decoder anymore, do i have to install a certain codec to see this option.
Just wondering if anyone has been experiencing the same problems as myself.
No other software is running when I encode films, and the film output is always the same:
Video-CD PAL (MPEG-1 352x288 25fps CBR 1150kbps, Layer-2 44100Hz 224kbps)
During encoding I frequently get error's like:
Read error at address XXXXX or Floating point error
This can happen anytime during encoding, at other times it will complete without erring.
Even during batching of 2 or 3 movies, it will err out on the first one after say 20 minutes, complete the second movie and then err out a few minutes into the third one.
I am running XP Professional with a 1.5Gb AMD Athlon 1500+ Processor with 1Gb memory and around 250Gb hard disk space.
I am using the current free version of TMPGEnc, I use CladDVDXP for ripping, DVD2AVI 1.82 for creating the project and (wave) sound file, have also used DVD2AVI 1.76 but still the same results, it also happens with previous versions of TMPGEnc.
The following CPU Enviroment options are enabled:
MMX, MMX2, SSE and 3D Now
I have seen references regarding conflicts with Windows Medial Player, my version is 8.00.00.4487
Running TMPGEnc on a laptop with a 1Gb Pentium III Processor with 256Mb memory and the same version of XP and Windows Media Player does not produce any errors and always completes the films, though it takes 4 times longer than my Desktop PC
Also on my old PC which had a Pentium III 450 Processor with 512Mb Memory and running under ME always completed the films without any errors.
The above is what is holding me back in purchasing the retail version for SVCD
I have read that With Athlons there is a Little Problem with the SSE-2 option and they recomend only to enable it at your Own risk when useing Tmpgenc...Maybe try disableing the SSE-2 option , but the encodeing will be slower, Or use a Pentium or Celeron to encode as Opposed to an Athlon..I run a 1.7ghz Celeron and Never once have I had any sort of error while encodeing D2V files from DVD2AVI 1.76...
as the tmpenc cut&merge tool is IMHO one of the best solutions I've seen yet, I wonder if there is any sdk available for frame-accurate stream editing. 'though I found some vendors like www.mediaware.com.au, www.nanocosmos.de or www.vitecmm.com which are all a bit expensive (or unresponsive) I'd like to know if there are any mpeg-2 editing sdk's around?
I'm totally aware that there are mpeg-2 licensing fees, so it doesn't have to be free ... ;)
WOW, you are one of the Only poeple I have ever seen who has Good things to say about the Merge & Cut tool cuz it is Buggy at the best of times, and it doesn"t support the accurate editing of VBR Files and the second part of a Edited file allways seems to be out of sync and it only supports (Officialy) streams that were encoded by Tmpgenc...But I"m pretty sure there is a Tmpgenc SDK,But All the Sites I have found for Tmpgenc SDK were in Japaneese..
I have recently formated and freshly installed win xp pro as my second operating system but in enviromental settings under vfapi i dont see the option for the ligos mpeg2 decoder anymore, do i have to install a certain codec to see this option.
Well yes of cource you do, You have to install the "Ligos Mpeg2 decoder" or the "Cyberling Mpeg2 decoder" Both will Let you open Mpeg2 files with Tmpgenc..
If you install the Tsunami Codec Pack you will get the Ligis Mpeg2 decoder..
I'm new to video encoding and I'm experimenting with the freeware version of TMPG trying to convert my 1 min 30 sec, 300MB AVI file to create a VCD for use in my DVD player. I've been fairly successful so far; the quality of the output on my CD-R is on par with a VHS tape. But I'd like to kick it up a notch and get near DVD quality by increasing the bitrate. However, I cannot set the encoding bitrate higher than 2520 kbits/sec CBR when converting the AVI file to mpeg2. Why can't I set it higher? Is this the highest transfer rate for data off of a CD or is the freeware version crippled?
I'm new to video encoding and I'm experimenting with the freeware version of TMPG trying to convert my 1 min 30 sec, 300MB AVI file to create a VCD for use in my DVD player. I've been fairly successful so far; the quality of the output on my CD-R is on par with a VHS tape. But I'd like to kick it up a notch and get near DVD quality by increasing the bitrate. However, I cannot set the encoding bitrate higher than 2520 kbits/sec CBR when converting the AVI file to mpeg2. Why can't I set it higher? Is this the highest transfer rate for data off of a CD or is the freeware version crippled?
what setting do i tweak to get the sound and video in check with each other, i encoded a video with seperate audio source but the sound was few seconds behind the video, looked on faq but no joy
If it is a Few seconds out of sync then you have a pretty Big Problem, and the Problem probably is that your Audio file is a Different length than the Video file, check to see that the audio and video are same length before you encode them..
You have Got it all Wrong..I said the Length NOT the Size..Of cource the SIZE will be Different But the LENGTH should be the same..In Minutes and seconds and Milla-seconds Not Mega Bytes.....
Well if you have a Audio editor it will tell you ..or something Like the DB Power Amp Power Pack, But what should work is to Right click the File go to Properties and the length should be displayed, or if you load the audio file into Virtual Dun then go to "File" to "File Information" it should tell you...
IT isn"t Tmpgenc..You probably just have the Right Combination of filters installed to decode the file But it isn"t tmpgenc that is specificly supporting AC3...Or you just think the File has AC3 audio...
Minion is right you just have the right codec installed. Even with the right Ac3 filter installed it's still touch and go half of the time as to whether TMPG will open the file correctly.
Well if it works then use it ,But I"m sure that it will not be very consistant, and it Probably handle Real Domby 5.1 Cuz that has 5-6 audio chanels and I don"t think Tmpgenc has Downmixing functions...
When i encode my DivX or XviD they always come out with horrible video quality. Its not the source or "garbage in, garbage out", im just doing something horribly wrong. Anyone with good experiences converting from these format please do tell me what your steps are. Thanks in advance.
Generally if your AVI File has good Quality you should be able to get acceptable Quality Just by loading in your File and chooseing the SVCD template and encodeing it...There are No special setting or anything that to Make the Quality good unless the Source file has Bad Quality then you have to tweak a Few settings to get a Better result so there isn"t something special that we know that you don"t..And what exactly do you mean By Horrible Quality ??What exactly is wrong with the Files??? Just remember your Shouldn"t upsize the resolution of your source file, meaning if your Source file has a Resolution of 320+240 you shouldn"t make a SVCD out of it, that file would make a Better VCD..And allways encode to the Frame rate of your Source file, meaning if your File is a Pal file don"t encode it to NTSC or Visa versa..Maybe give us the specs of your Source file and how you are setting up Tmpgenc to encode it then maybe we can find something that you are doing wrong..If you are Haveing big problems you can e-mail me and I"ll try to help out if I can..
Well to do this you load in your File and look at the source aspect ratio then set the output aspect ratio to what the source aspect ratio is, then set the Resolution to what the resolution of you source file is..But if your Source file has a Resolution other than the Standard resolution for what you are trying to make (VCD/SVCD/DVD) it probably will not play on your DVD Player..and the Output resolution has to be divisible by 8 or Tmpgenc will give you an error....
It is Impossible to Have a Mpeg file with a Resolution that is not Divisable By 8..ALL Mpeg files have to have a Resolution divisible by 8 that is Part of the Mpeg standard, there is NO Way around it with ANY Encoder...
oh, ok. i didn't know that. so how do i pad my video with black to make it's resolution divisible by 8? i do not want to stretch or cut any part of my videos.
Well you can try This, set the Resolution to the Closest you can to the resolution of your source file but scale it up Not down, then under "Video arrange Method" set it to "Custom" then put in the resolution of your source file..This should just add a Black boarder for the extra pixels..If you made these files your self then next time choose a Resolution that conforms to Mpeg standards,...
The "Video CD Non-Standard" setting is for exactly for that ,Muxing Non-Standard VCD files, non-standard meaning vcd"s with Higher than Standard or Lower than VCD standard Bitrates..The regular VCD setting will not remove any Padding in the VCD stream or it will add Padding if the Bitrate is Lower than the VCD Standard..If you are useing the Multiplex to Change the header of a SVCD so you can Play it on a DVD Player that doesn"t play SVCD"s then you should use the "NON-Standard" setting because it sure isn"t a Standard VCD..But don"t you get a "Buffer Underflow" error when doing this????