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TMPGEnc 2.5 (Free or plus version) BBS [ Sorted by thread creation date ]
When I am attempting to convert other .mpg & .avi files, I have been receiving a p3.dll & p4.dll error when it is about 1/2 way done. This did not use to occur. What can I do to make it stop? I have attempted reloading the program...as well as making a copy of the p3 & p4 drivers into my system32 folder...and that still does not work. I am currently using Windows XP OS. Could there be something clashing with these drivers?
Hello guys, for example if you download a movie off the internet that has audio problems such as a muffled sound and hissing is there a way to clean the audio up with TMPGEnc????
I have some old Movie Shaker files that I have saved as .avi files. I am wondering if I can use TMPGEnc to convert the files into a format that can be imported to Studio 9 from Pinnacle. When I run the conversion on a small sample file, I get a .m2v file and a .wav file; however, I have no clue how to get this to a Pinnacle format. Any help would be much appreciated.
I am encoding an .avi file that I digitized from a VHS tape. The encoded file will be greater than 4.7 gig so will not fit on one DVD blank. What process should I use to break the resultant .m2v file into to parts so that I can burn 2 DVDs?
How long is the AVI?
If it's around the 2hr mark then you should be able to fit this no problem on one disk with great quality using VBR mode.
However, if you must split it you can either use the source range function to split it while encoding or split it after encoding with the MPEG tools.
Unless this AVI is very long you must have your bitrate set too high for it to be larger than 4.7GB (actually 4.37GB)
I think you're gonna find it unecessary to split it to 2 disks especially seeing as it is captured from a low quality source such as VHS anyway.
Go back to the site where you purchased the serial from and you should be able to work it out from there.
As far as I'm concerned if the serial is legit then I can't understand why you don't know the reason you're having this problem because everthing is explained.
Please help me get up to speed. I am standing in for the regular engineer and having to get experience by trial by fire. Using a 2.8Ghz, 1GB RAM, 800FSB PC with Win 2000 and the latest TMPGEnc version as an encoder, we compressed over a dozen MPEGs to 352X240 29,97fps CQ_VBR 90 Layer 2 48000Hz 120kbps. Most of the inidividual projects created a great reduced size file. But about 8 of the compressed MPEGs dropped the last 3.3 sec of audio when we played them. They started at 30.3 and the audio cut off at 27.0. All the video was fine, full 30.3 sec, but silent at the end. As a learning tool, I had downloaded a copy of the TMPGEnc software on a PC at home (Pent II, 266Mhz, 128MB RAM running Win 98 SE). I took the 8 original files home to experiment and the final product was great. Same template was used at both locations. Can anyone explain this? I really need the machine at work to do the job for us. What do I change?
I think a little more detailed info on your actual problem and what you are trying to acheive wouldn't go amiss here.
Also why the hell did you post it as a bug report?
AVISource("neogeo.avi")
BicubicResize(352,240,0,0.6)
v1=selectevery(2,0)
v2=selectevery(2,1)
vid=Interleave(v1,v2).weave()
#vid=Interleave(v2,v1).weave() #don't know the right field order
Return(vid)
This results in a Half-D1 interlaced Video (29.97 fps).
(can't test it here, but it should work)
Everytime I try to open an AVI file I get an error saying that the format is not supported. I have the NIMO codek pack installed and I'm able to watch the movies on my computer. I'm running on windows XP. Does anyone knows whats happening?
Try opening TMPGEnc and then go to the Environmental Settings. Under VFAPI plug-in, right click on the number next to "Directshow Multimedia File Reader" and click on "Higher Priority" again and again until that row is at the top of the list. Then, try opening your AVI again.
>Hi,
>
>Everytime I try to open an AVI file I get an error saying that the format is not supported. I have the NIMO codek pack installed and I'm able to watch the movies on my computer. I'm running on windows XP. Does anyone knows whats happening?
>
>Thank you
You solve my AVI to MPEG2 conversion problem, what I have been trying investigate last 2 days.
Best reg: Eero
>Sakuya 05/16 (
>Try opening TMPGEnc and then go to the Environmental Settings. Under VFAPI >plug-in, right click on the number next to "Directshow Multimedia File Reader" >and click on "Higher Priority" again and again until that row is at the top of >the list. Then, try opening your AVI again.
Hi, everyone. I hope someone may know what's going on here, because I definitely don't. LOL
I have an AVI that I have been attempting to convert successfully for the past 7 hours, and have been failing miserably. I am using TMPGEnc to convert to MPG (or m2v and mp2) so that I can use TMPG DVD Author to output it to DVD. However, every time it converts the AVI, the audio is choppy (it skips every few seconds), even though the video does not. It still ends up lining up with the video, but it hangs for a split second, then stutters, then plays like it should. I've tried so many different fixes that I'm not even sure what I've tried and what I haven't. I've kind of exhausted all of the options I know of, though.
AVI STATS
----------
Video Codec: MP43 (S-Mpeg 4 version 3)
Runtime: 00:02:42 (4,900 fr)
Bitrate: 273 kb/s
FPS: 30.303