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TMPGEnc 2.5 (Free or plus version) BBS [ Sorted by thread creation date ]
minioN..thanks dude for all ur help.really make these forums worth while posting in...im prety sure everyone thats posted here
feeels the same way,,
anyways...
keep up the good work dude..:)
I just downloaded TMPGEnc using the wizard and converting from Divx to SVCD using the High Quality setting the video is not smooth about every 10 seconds, it seems to skip a frame or pause for a milisecond.
The file is being converted on a intel celeron 1.3ghz.
Are there any settings that can be changed to prevent this?
Does anyone know why this is happening?
i 've downloaded and i am very satisfied with this proggy but i've a question .. i was converting a avi video into mpeg and my PC crashed during the operation ... now i have a mpeg file which is not completed ... is it possible to resume the conversion process from the frame where it was aborted ? it would save me a lot of time ...
Sort of.
Load your unfinished MPEG into TMPG the click File>Preview and move the slider to the very end, click on the arrow a couple of times just to make sure it is the end and note the frame number.
Now load your AVI, click Setting>advanced and double click the 'Source range ' filter. Type the frame number you just got from your MPEG into the 'start frame' box then click the 'set start frame' button.
Do the same for the end frame and then encode your movie.
You will have only the part from where your PC crashed encoded. You then have to join the 2 parts together using the 'Merge&Cut' tool, go to File>MPEGtools.
Im following up on that illegal mpeg situation. I make my mpegs with vcd gear using the bin-cue - mpeg option. I installed that mpeg2 codec and this still didnt solve the issue. Cant demultiplex either cuz it says illegal mpeg no matter what i do. Please help! thanks again
VCD gear is your problem. This program is crap.
I have had many instances of VCD gear producing illegal MPEGs and MPEGs TMPG doesn't like and gave up using the program a long time ago.
What is the reason you are trying to extract the MPEG from an image anyway?
Anyway the best way I have found of extracting MPEGs from images is to use ISOBUSTER. http://www.smart-projects.net/isobuster/
This program will extract a usable MPG or .dat file from the image which you can then open in TMPG.
There is no need to convert .dat to MPEG as TMPG has no problem opening .dat files.
the reason i have to do that is so i can do the trick to make my dvd player play the svcds. I make an mpeg and use tmpgenc to put a vcd header on it. So should i be able to take the mpegs that i have already made and make em work still with isobuster? I hope so cuz i have a lot of them. Thanks again for all the help. :)
i 've downloaded and i am very satisfied with this proggy but i've a question .. i was converting a avi video into mpeg and my PC crashed during the operation ... now i have a mpeg file which is not completed ... is it possible to resume the conversion process from the frame where it was aborted ? it would save me a lot of time ...
As a newbie I just downloaded TMPGEnc 2.54a to try it together with my WinTV PVR to make SVCD's. With WinTV PVR I recorded a mpg file and tried to convert/"repair" it with TMPGEnc., because Nero complained about it, when I tried to burn a SVCD. I used File>MPEGTools and everything went right, also with the burning with Nero after that. However on the burnt SVCD I miss about 5 minutes of the original 20 minutes video. The converted file also is some 20% smaller than the original file.
Did I do something wrong or are there limitations, regarding the size, in the free version of TMPGEnc ?
I don"t know why your movie is shorter after useing "tmpgenc" but I might know why "nero" was complaining adout the file and a possible solution.Nero wouldn"t accept the file because it was not encoded for svcd ,meaning there were no svcd headers on the file,you can easily put the proper headers on the file by loading it in the "merge and cut" feature and chooseing "super-vcd/mpeg2 VBR" in the drop down menue, choose your out put directory and click "run", tmpgenc will now make a copy of your mpeg file but put the proper headers on it to make it svcd compliant, now nero should accept it unless the frame size is out of specs, but a lot of players will play svcd"s with non-standard frame sizes ,mine plays svcd"s with 704 by 480 better than the 480 by 480 frame size, This might be a work around for your problem if you cant fix it with tmpgenc..
Thank you Minion for your reply. Tonight I will try your solution.
In the meantime I tried again to "repair" the file with tmpgenc (File>MPEGtools>Simple Multiplex). I browsed for the mpg file and hitted run and then it began to multiplex. However that stopped at about 80% and then the header writing began. Thus the stopping at 80% with multiplexing should be the cause of the problem I think. However I don't understand why it stops at 80% and what I could do. I hope you can help we further with this.
TIA
I love TMPGEnc, and plan on registering next payday. However, I have one problem.
I am capturing using a MPeg2(software) card at 720x480, I Frames only. I then use DVD2AVI to convert to MPeg1 for editing. When I go to Encode either a DVD or SCVD, the picture is noticably brighter than the original or a VCD, MPeg-1 reencode. I've tried two or three sets of templates from the web and this problem still persists.
Is there a good way to correct this problem, or do I need to use something like the Flask Encoder?
The simplest way to correct the problem is to change the brightness before you encode with TMPG.
Click the 'setting' button then 'advanced' then double click the 'simple colour' correction filter.
Now adjust the brigtness to your liking.
You haven"t missed anything,this seems to happen when you edit and join a file part way through a "gop", you can try to avoid it by editing and joining in a different part like a second earlier or later in the file,..
Always click the 'correct' button before you join, this should correct the problem. This should make sure the GOP's are joined together correctly.
If it doesn't, do as Minion says and move the cut up or down a few frames slightly and try again.
I capture one hour of video with AVI-IO that "breaks" it in several files because of the 2 GB limitation. Those several files are then joined with TMPGenc so there are no way how to join in a different part like a second or even a frame earlier or later or the result video will certainly jump. Am I wrong?
What sort of AVI are you using. Using today's modern AVI codecs you should be able to capture up to 4gb of AVI.
The 2gb limit was for old version 1 AVI.
You should be using virtualdub to frameserve those segmented files to TMPG, or AVIsynth to join them, not joining them together like that.
Open Virtual dub, load your first AVI then click File>Append video segment and load next AVI. Do this for each segment and they will be automatically joined into one then start the frameserver and frameserve to TMPG.
I was just wondering why TMPGEnc Version 2.54a dosen't convert the audio along with the video -- It will start off fine with about 5 seconds of video & audio but then after that the audio will cut out and i'm left with the video only -- I'm new to this program so if anyone could help It would be greatly appreciated.
If the audio on your avi files is "mp3 vbr" tmpgenc will have problems encodeing and it will either cut out or just not encode,as a general rule I allways extract the audio from my avi"s to "wav" format and encode that for my audio, this is one possible cause of your problem,but the solution will fix many audio problems..
Try a different "demultiplexor" , there is a free one called "XMuxer" which uses "Elcard Mpeg2" software but is put out by a company called "MoonLight" you can find it on a search engine just type in "XMuxer" but it only works with mpeg2, but it seems to do the job with files that don"t work with "tmpgenc"..
Actually Xmuxer will de-multiplex MPEG1 files too even though it isn't naturally supported.
A pretty good multiplexer, de-multiplexer comes with Darims DVMPEG software and is supposedly meant to be more accurate regarding the MPEG specifications than TMPG. http://www.darvision.com/product/dvmpeg.html
What I want to do is Encode a VCD with several repeating frame.
I want to have "1" Frame repeat over and over so that it shows for 5 seconds.
Also Is their any way to Encode into TMPGenc still pictures I have into a movie similar to stop motion photography where they put together still shots to make it apear that the object or objects are moving another problem I am faced with is having them repeat so they apear for a few seconds. Sugestions?
You can take seperate pictures in "bitmap" or "jpeg" format and encode them into a mpeg file, and there might be a way you can get 1 frame repeat for 5 frames sort of , if you have an avi file that was at 5 frames per second and encoded it to mpeg at 29.97fps, I think "tmpgenc" would just repeat the first frame five times then the next frame five times and so on, but it would look really wierd, but I guess this is what you are going for...
Minion:
How do I go about doing that? That sounds good. I have a couple test patterns I am trying to encode as the patterns allow you to set your brightness, Sharpness and contrast to THX quality. Pulled it off the "From Hell" DVD.
Also I figured it would be cool if I could do some stop animation Video with my Digital camera..hehe Any help you could give would be apreciated thanks. :o) ~ NewtronX
There is an easy way to do this using Animation shop in PSP 7.
Get yourself a copy and I'll give you instructions how to use it to repeat a frame for five seconds.
ASHY:
Whats Animation shop in PSP 7? Is PSP 7 an abreviation? Also I was hoping TMPGenc could do it alone guess not bummer.. TMPGenc rocks I wish It did every thing as it already seems to come close to bad it cant read and import sequential VOB files automaticaly like DVD2AVI.
Thanks for the program ASHY its kinda neat but I still wish TMPGenc could do it..lol I want TMPGenc to be the Begin all and end all...TMPGenc Rocks.
Thanks again ASHY and Minion for you advice. Best regards ~NewtronX
HereÃÔ what I did: I transfered video captured from my digital camcorder to my computer using my PYRO firewire card. Next I created a final edited piece using a combination using Ulead Media Studio Pro and Pinnacle Studio 7. Finally, I used TMPGENC to create a DVD-compliant MPEG2 and then created a DVD using DVDIT.
HereÃÔ my problem: The final edited DV video looks great played back on the computer or played back on my TV. But the MPEG2 played back on the computer or on the my home DVD player has major jitter/flicker/noise during all significant movements (Imagine a camera focusing on one person and then moving to another person).
Now, I can recompress my final DV file with the ÅÇlicker freeEoption or change the field order and choose ÅÅeinterlaceEand then create a new DV file before encoding to MPEG2 and the jitter/flicker/noise problem is solved, but there are problems with this. First, this is an extra step and requires extra time. Second, I am recompressing the file, which could not be good for overall quality. Third, it seems like there is an easier way and that most people wouldnÃÕ even think to go through that extra step.
Am I missing something obvious here? I just want to streamline the process and maximize the final quality of the DVD. Any help would be greatly appreciated!
I take it the original movie is an interlaced 29.97 fps movie.
These sound like interlacing artifacts. You should have applied IVTC to the original movie before encoding it to MPEG2 to return the movie to a progressive frames state or captured to progressive frames in the first place (if that's possible)
Or you could just use the de-interlace option in TMPG when encoding, but the quality will be lower.
I thought that DV (to .avi) from a DV camcorder was non-interlaced already? This is very confusing! Can someone elaborate when using DV/.avi as input to TMPGEnc?
I found this on deja.com after posting my original question and it solved the problem.
> > Under advanced set the source to interlaced.
> > Under deinterlace set the checkmark.
> > double click on it, then select the even-odd field option.(field
> > adaptation).
How much qualiy loss should I expect here? And if I have to reencode my original DV, aren't I going to lose an equal amount of quality? And finally, why do you think I need this extra step to begin with? Might it be Pinnacle's capture piece?
De-interlacing will correct the problem, but because of the way de-interlacing works it will give your movie a slightly blurry bilinear effect, and can make some movement look unatural.
IVTC is usually used on movies that were originally progressive 23.976 fps and have had a 3:2 pulldown added when encoded to make the movie an interlaced 29.97 fps movie.
I'm not sure how your DVcam works. It may capture to progressive frames and then add it's own pulldown in which case you would then use IVTC(Inverse telecine) to reverse this which would give you back a 23.976 progressive movie and should rid you of any interlacing problems thereby giving you a better quality image.