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TMPGEnc 2.5 (Free or plus version) BBS [ Sorted by thread creation date ]
ok so I have to admit I'm a bit of a newbie at this, but I've tried everything so far before i resort to hassling u all about it.
I'm having major trouble getting my audio synced up.
Ripped blade using smart ripper, flasked into avi so i have a divx, and for the last 4 days i've been trying to make svcds using tmpgenc.
I've ripped out the audio using virtual dub, encoded the movie and sound together, and to be honest the whole mpeg file plays back fine through media player, but as soon as i transfer to cds using nero or vcdeasy i get the same problem.... the audio is 0.3 seconds begind the movie (not the case for the mpeg).....
anyone know a quick fix for this rather than encode everything again and deliberately offset the audio????
i've had a look at using the mpeg tools for demultiplexing the audio from the video, but once i've done this i can't use these files in virtual dub as it doesn't like them..
I don"t know who told you that was how you make a SVCD out of a DVD Rip but that isn"t how you do it, unless you need the DivX file for another purpose, cuZ encodeing it to DivX will make you loose a lot of Quality instead of encodeing right from the DVD"s Vob files...The Best way is to use DVD2AVI to make a D2V project file and a Wav file and then encode that to SVCD...but since you probably don"t have the VOB files anymore explaining it won"t help...Is the audio the same amount out of sybc the whole way through the file??If it is then you can use the "Multiplexor" in Mpeg2vcr to mux the audio and video together cuz it has a feature that will let you off set the audio to sync up with the video.You Cant load SVCD files into Virtual Dub anyways cuz it doesn"t support Mpeg2 files and why would wou want to anyways??...In the future if you want to make a Proper SVCD from a DVD do it the proper way and you will have lots less problems...
hey thanks for getting back to me..
yeah I know that the method i've been through to get to svcd is weird but i did want the divx file u see, and to be honest most of the svcds i will be making will be from a divx source so i need to sort out the method i've been using.
the mpegtovcr tool sounds just the job so thanks a bunch i'll go get it now. yeah the audio is offset 0.3 secs all the way through the movie... only by the time it gets to my dvd player though as cds though, not through a pc player... weird!!
thanks for your words minion, and as promised i'm yer best mate =)
Hang on a minute here, if you go offsetting nthe audio deliberately so your DVD will play it in sync even though the original MPEG is in sync then I'm afraid you may find that when you play the movie in another player, you will experience audio desync again.
Does the movie you have created have audio desync even when you play the burned disk on your PC?
If the answer is yes then you may get away with the adding the audio skew. If not then addindg skew is not the answer.
If the original is in perfect sync then so should be the burned movie on both your PC and your DVD player.
Some DVD players are incompatible with certain burning softwares and earlier versions of Nero are known to cause this problem.
If you are using a new version of Nero then I would suggest using another piece of burning software.
Try doing a search on google.com for Instant cd-dvd which has been known to correct the problem.
Another important tip is to never burn above 4x as in most cases you will experience problems.
One other question I will leave you with. Have you used the MPEGtools to split your movie? If you have ensure you chose 'MPEG2 Super VCD(VBR)' as the stream type or you WILL experience problems when burning.
thanks for your suggestions.. you could indeed be right, however I have used nero for burning the mpegs with its own system, and now used vcdEasy which burned the image it created, so I find it a little weird that there should still be an audio problem even after just burning a direct image that vcdeasy has created !!
I'll try the playing the movie back on my pc.. t0p idea :)
however I'm now 3 steps back of where i started.. Every single mpeg that tmpenc creates for me comes back as succeeded from the log, however when trying to open the file in any player, or even with mpeg tools I get informed that the mpeg is in an unknown format, and tmpgenc reports a stream reading error.
the file sizes seem correct, just can't do anything with them.
mpegcorrector and mpegtovcr are both unable to correct the files headers either..
sheeesh.. 3 weeks after i started to do all this I still haven't got a single svcd to show for my efforts !!!
Any ideas??
I'm using tmpgenc with
tooLame
Lame
also directshow priority on 2
I'm assuming we are still referring to SVCD. Your problem of being unable to play the file back could probably be to the fact that you do not have an MPEG2 capable player installed. Media player will NOT play back MPEG2 files if you do not have a compatible MPEG2 codec installed and generally won't play back burned SVCD's at all.
Download WinDVD and try playing your MPEG2 files and SVCD's with that.
The audio doesn"t convert because the audio is not supported in Tmpgenc..You have to extract the audio to a Wav file with Virtual Dub and use that as your audio file....
Then you must not have made the avi file your self??Cuz who ever made it off set the audio at the begining of the file in an attempt to Sync it up..So The problem isn"t with Tmpgenc it is with the avi file, you probably downloaded it off Kazaa or something??Most Kazaa files aren"t very reliable and don"t encode very Well because of these audio problems or Frame rate problems or a dozzen other problems..I have been useing Tmpgenc for a Long time now and it allways works perfectly for me and allways has because I make all the avi files that I encode or I encode DVD"s that I Rip myself...
I'm trying to save a file as AVI, and under "video>setting>compression I only have Cinepack and H.263, although I installed divx 5.0.2 and bunch of other codecs.
Funny thing, my VirtualDub can encode using,say, Divx engine, but TMPGEnc can't!
Any help will be greatly appreciated!
I used dvd2svcd to rip the movie and encode it.The ripping part was oke, then TMPGEnc couldn`t download the file.
I tried to open TMPGEnc download the files manualy ,the video file downloaded, but the audio didn`t, even tough it was the right file the message said:
File"C:program files......................AviSynth_Script_file.avs" can not open, or unsupported
What do you mean TMPG wouldn't download the file?
I'm assuming you mean TMPG wouldn't open the file.
Have you actually installed AVisynth before trying to use TMPG to open the script.
You may have an error in your script. A quick check to see whether the script is ok or not is to simply open it with media player. The file should play if it's ok. If it doesn't then there is something wrong with the script or you don't have AVIsynth installed correctly.
If it does play in mediaplayer then you may need to disable the Directshow filter in TMPG under the VFAPI plugins to allow TMPG to read the file.
Why is there no audio in an MPG encoded with TMPG if the original source DVD is LPCM. I have tried 4 DVD's with the same results. The wav file created by DVD2AVI plays fine with any audio player. But after I encode the the DVD2AVI project with the created wave file, the resulting MPG is silent.
Is is possible to encode for widescreen WITHOUT stretching the video. I have a lot of home digital video I would like to burn to DVD but formated correctly for my Mits. HD widescreen.
If you load the "Unlock.mcf" Template you will be able to change the settings locked in by the templates, then you can change the output aspect ratio to 16:9, and if this doesn"t fix it then use the settings in the "Clip Frame" feature to arrange the movie in the screen to the way you want....
I have unlocked the template and changed the output to 16x9 and that WILL format the video but STRETCHED.
I have also played with the clipping function but as yet have had no luck.
If I knew that is was possible to output for widescreen without streching the video I would continue experimenting, but I don't know if it is possible with TMPGEnc.
I know I can get this functionality with software in the $600 and up range but that is out of my league.
This is one of the most common Questions asked in this forum, The audio in your AVI file is not supported by Tmpgenc so you have to extract the audio to a WAV file with "Virtual Dub" and use that as the audio source...
Hi... I know thisd is "off topic" but I downloaded 2 files from KaZaa that were supposed to be movie clips from 2 old Pam Grier films. They turned out to be some sort of data files. I cannot do anything - it seems - to remove them from my hard drive. DELETE does not work. SEND TO does not work. RENAME does not work. Nothing seems to touch the damn things!
Any suggestions?
Yes, I have gotten those Before on Kazaa and they can be a big problem,I would sugest not downloading anything off Kazaa unless a lot of other poeple have the same program, and allways look at the file size of what you are downloading cuz usually a problem file will have a name of a movie or program but the file size is much too small to be the file it says it is...The only way I was able to get rid of some problem Kazaa file was to delete my whole Kazaa folder then make a new one......
Tried in DOS mode? Assuming you're not using 2K or XP with NTFS hard drive format. Booted off say a Win 98 Boot floppy?
I've not had this problem myself. I presume you've closed KaZaA and your web connection before trying to delete?
In addition to this have you changed KaZaA version whilst still having incomplete downloads? I changed from Grokster to KaZaA once and each file I had part downloaded on Grokster had to be renamed with the appropriate extension upon completion under KaZaA.
Most likely it is not a virus. When you tried to delete it, did it say something like file is in use.
If so, you might try this. Use Windows Explorer. Change to that directory where the file is located. Under the menu View, change to details. Give
it a second or so to allow XP to make some changes. Then try to delete it.
Kazzaa has some files that have movie extensions and Windows tries to create thumbnails and etc and gets stuck trying.
Thanks guys, for all your suggestions. Since my Kazaa "shared file" was only 2 gigabytes in size I simply created a "fix kazaa" folder and moved everything but those 2 invaders to it. I then deleted the entire folder.
I will try to be more observant next time!!!
Can someone suggest a good way of telling up to what bitrate a player will go ?
In the past I did the following
- Selected a scene with a lot of action it - the first 2 mins of Mummy2
- Saved the scene as a seperate avi using an avi cutting tool
- Encoded the scene in TMPGenc at various different CBR settings 2000, 2100 , 2200 etc with everything always the same except for the bitrate
- Joined all the output files together into one MPEG
- Burnt the mpeg with VCDeasy creating a chapter at each section where a new bitrate setting comes into effect
- Played each chapter on the DVD player and looked/listened for video/audio stutter
Is this a good way of doing this or is there a better way ?
Olli
P.S I have lost the manual for the player (Sony DAVS300) so I cant look it up, plus I dont think it specifically mentioned bitrate limits.
P.P.S Yes I have looked on vcdhelp.com and some people say they can go up to 3000 but I have found the limit to be 2300
Hi Ollie,The method you are useing seems like it should work..I have noticed with my DVD Player that it can handle much higher bitrates if I am useing a VBR Encodeing method like CQ, cuz it seems to only get to really high bitrates for a few seconds and it seems that the Player can handle the bitrate better if it is gradual or only for short periods of time..I know if I set the Minimum bitrate to say 1000kbs and the max to 8000kbs my player can handle it with no problem but if I use say 5000kbs CBR then my player has some problems playing it....
I have been unable to encode any files larger than 2GB. .AVI doesn't seem to support >2GB at all, and TMPGEnc cannot deal with a Quicktime file that is larger than 2GB.
NTFS = for all intense and purposes no single file size limit
It should be noted that some programs, despite one working on an NTFS partition, will still not work with file sizes that extend beyond the 2 or 4GB file size limits. A good example of this is Winzip 8.1, Winzip will not open ZIP files larger than 4GB, yet one can create ZIP files of this size with the upto date DOS version of Winzip, called PKZIP...(PKZIPC.EXE being the file name).