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TMPGEnc 2.5 (Free or plus version) BBS [ Sorted by thread creation date ]
I want to convert some .avi files to .mpg so I can then burn them to VCD and play them on my TV. I'm limited to 700mb per disk, so is there some setting that creates multiple .mpg files from a single .avi file (whenever it hits the 700mb limit - then it should create another .mpg file)?
UM, Why are you limiting yourself to 700mb?? You can fit 800mb on a 80min 700mb CD-R, Just think of VCD"s as being 10mb per minute of AVI you are encodeing, if the File turns out longer then you cut the file into Parts with the "Mpeg tools" "Merge & Cut"...
I'm looking for exact "step by step set-up. I like to do the same things as far as editing my long movie files to fit into 2 cdr's..
Thank you for your advice.
I recently upgraded to the latest version (2.511) of the registered version. My machine is a dual 2.4 GHz Xeon machine, so it appears to have 4 processors. I am encoding a simple DV-AVI file and I'm getting a hang at various stages in the encoding process. It doesn't completely freeze up, but starts to move at an incredibly slow pace and is performing nonstop disk I/O. Did something change with the multi CPU behavior?
Both Xeons and newer P4 processors have Hyperthreading technology. This causes 2 physical processors to appear as 4 logical processors. The environmental settings screen also incorrectly states that there are 2 'logical processors' when there are actually 4 (Again, there are 2 physical processors). When watching the encoding process on task manager (My task manager shows 4 different CPU level graphs), I see that the analyze part of 2-pass VBR IS in fact using all 4 CPUs when I do motion estimation, but not when I use the highest precision estimation (it only uses 2).
I know that as I have one with Hyper threading But it is Still a Single Proscessor but it is acting as a Dual Proscessor because of it"s architecture..
Correct. But I have 2 chips for a total of 4 logical processors. It's an i860 Supermicro motherboard.
Do you know of any problems that could cause the 2-pass VBR to hang, generally somewhere between 60 and 70%. I can do some experimentation tonight and test the machine using the /ONECPU bootflag and see if that makes a difference. Note that I've never seen this problem before last night (that means it's either the .511 build or some fluke involving this particular .avi)
Well I came home and ran it again, this time it worked fine, so who knows. The only difference in setting was to put the minimum bitrate to 1000 instead of 0.
As a programmer, I completely understand. I'm totally satisfied with the product, but I'm going to provide more info here for other people having the same problem and also so that the developer can maybe fix the problem in a future version...
Even though I was successful once, I wanted to turn the bitrate up a bit so I encoded again. This time I froze up at 86%. I used FileMon (sysinternals) to see what the disk activity was... One of the threads in TmpgEnc is continuously reading 224k chunks from the source .AVI file. I believe that this disk IO is starving the other threads from getting any IO done. Note that this can occur in either the 'analyzing' or the encoding phase of the 2-pass.
Later, I will try to turn off multithreading and see if that fixes the problem as a workaround...
Correct. But I have 2 chips for a total of 4 logical processors. It's an i860 Supermicro motherboard.
Do you know of any problems that could cause the 2-pass VBR to hang, generally somewhere between 60 and 70%. I can do some experimentation tonight and test the machine using the /ONECPU bootflag and see if that makes a difference. Note that I've never seen this problem before last night (that means it's either the .511 build or some fluke involving this particular .avi)
Hello
In encoding SVCDs at low bitrate, I find that if I use VBR the resulting file size is not always the same as predicted. I tried to encode for a 90 min. CD and the result is an 814 MB file. If I use CBR the file size is equal to prediction. I am using either the bult-in calculator of the registered version or the FITCD caluclator for 90 min. CDs.
Anybody has an idea on why is this happening? here are the settings:
stream type: MPG-2 Video
Size: 480x576
Aspect ratio: 4:3 display
Frame rate: 25 fps
Rate Control mode: 2-pass VBR(VBR)
avg. bitrate: 950
max. bitrate: 2520
min. bitrate: 200 Padding is NOT enabled
VBV buffer size: 112
Profile: Main profile & main level
Video format: PAL
Encode: Interlace
YUV format: 4:2:0
DC component: 8 bits
Motion search: High quality
Here is a site selling the Retail version of TMPGenc Plus for £59.
As far as I can see the only difference is you get a manual with it.
Does anyone else think that a price of £29(equivalent $48) for the downloadable version and a price of £59(equivalent $95) for the retail version is a bit steep just for a manual?
is there any possibility to buy TMPEG Plus from Europe? I think Eurocard, Visa is not the real sollution! There are many users out of europe which whant to buy this program, but they could not....
What are you talking about?
You can pay by most major credit cards and debit cards. VISA, MasterCard, Amex, Discover. Surely you have at least one of these or do you not even have a bank account!
What are you talking about?
You can pay by most major credit cards and debit cards. VISA, MasterCard, Amex, Discover. Surely you have at least one of these or do you not even have a bank account!
Visa, MC, Amex, and Discover are American bank issued credit cards and are not always used world wide as most North American's are lead to believe in those lame Visa commercials.
How can I create true VideoCD mpeg file with TMPGEnc? When I play mpeg by software player in my PC - all is ok, but my VideoCD player play it with jerky (movie turn back at some frame approx every one second). Original VideoCD disk my player play with no problem. With avi2vcd by John Schlichthe I able to create true VideoCD mpeg that played in my VideoCD player correctly.
I try to use Wizard for creating PAL VideoCD, try to use template VideoCD (PAL) and have same bad result. I think that may be problem in GOP structure parameters or Quantize matrix but not sure.
Does anybody have the same problem?
The first could be because you are changing the frame rate of your original source when encoding.
The second is an authoring problem. Are you making sure you are selecting VCD burning mode in your burning software or are you just burning a raw MPEG on to the disk?
Third could be that you are splitting the final MPEG in to 2 parts but are not selecting the correct stream type (MPEG-1 Video CD)
My guess is that you have altered the frame rate of the original. Post the frame rate and file type of the original source here.
>There could be a few reasons for this.
>
>The first could be because you are changing the frame rate of your original source when encoding.
>
No, I don't change original frame rate (25 fps). I try to convert the same original source (.avi file with 25 fps) with TMPGEnc, avi2vcd by John Schlichthe and now with old Xing MPEG Encoder. Unfortunately, only with TMPGEnc I have the problem.
>The second is an authoring problem. Are you making sure you are selecting VCD burning mode in your burning software or are you just burning a raw MPEG on to the disk?
>
For authoring I use VCDEasy and try to create disk with this 3 MPEG files encoded by different encoders. And I have the problem only with TMPGEnc encoded stream
>Third could be that you are splitting the final MPEG in to 2 parts but are not selecting the correct stream type (MPEG-1 Video CD)
>
No, I don't split the MPEG
>My guess is that you have altered the frame rate of the original. Post the frame rate and file type of the original source here.
>
.avi file with 25 fps, I try to encode any other source and have the same problem
May be this is my VideoCD hardware problem, but why other MPEGs played correctly?
How can I create true VideoCD mpeg file with TMPGEnc? When I play mpeg by software player in my PC - all is ok, but my VideoCD player play it with jerky (movie turn back at some frame approx every one second). Original VideoCD disk my player play with no problem. With avi2vcd by John Schlichthe I able to create true VideoCD mpeg that played in my VideoCD player correctly.
I try to use Wizard for creating PAL VideoCD, try to use template VideoCD (PAL) and have same bad result. I think that may be problem in GOP structure parameters or Quantize matrix but not sure.
Does anybody have the same problem?
I have got the same problem, I also have tried different, settings, like everything in high quality, but I used the same frame rate, but I still am having the problems, If you get any answer, please, let me know.
Everytime I try to put an mpeg2 video and audio source in, it says "cannot open or unsupported." I do not understand why it is doing this. I have Divx installed for codec. I have changed my Direct Show Multimedia File Reader from -1 to 2. What do I need to do to fix the problem?
Demultiplex the mpg stream using the MPEG Tools into the elementary streams (*.m2v and *.mp2) first. You should be able to load the resulting streams in TMpgEnc without problem. Works at least for me in this way.
Regards, Klaus
That will only work if you have a compatible MPEG2 codec installed either from a standalone codec such as the M2v plugin or from a PC DVD player such as PowerDVD.
>What about if the mpeg2-file opens and runs fine in the media player but TMPEG sais that it's unsupported?!
>
>This does mean that I already have the right code, doesn't it?!
when i encode certain xvid movies i get a lot of error messages.to get past this i raise the direct show file reader to +1 and i can encode the movie.the problem is, when i try to watch the movie the motion is very jumpy,like there are frames missing or something.i tried to encode the vcd at 30 fps but it's still not much better.Any suggestions?
i normally leave the frame rate at 25 fps,but the movement is still jumpy,the source file says it is 23 fps.but when tmpeg encodes some xvid files succesfully i don't have any prolems with the movement of the image,the other xvid files have been less than 25 fps.with the direct show filter set at -1 the vcd is fine but +1 always makes the movement jumpy.
If your source is 23fps and your output is 25 fps then this is your problem.
You cannot encode 23fps to 25fps as this will cause jerky playback. TMPG is not able to do correct frame rate conversion. There are ways however to do this correctly.
As for your problem importing XVID files. Download and install FFDSHOW.
Well I tried DVD author to edit mpeg-2 files which I derive directly from my satellite receiver.
704x574 is possible (only the datarate is too high but i convert this later)
But other porgrmas use 544x576 for example and then it is not possible to load the file. Of course, you cannot make directly a DVD out of this but with DVDx you can encode the "dvd" which DVDAuthor makes. Thus making this program handy for me, if I could bypass this error message and let it accept any mpeg2-format.
Would be worth it I guess.
You could try patching the headers to 704x576 using DVD patcher.
Even if it then allows the MPEG to be accepted I doubt it will play correctly in your DVD player.
544x576 is not a standard resolution for DVD or any other format I can think of and cannot understand why any program would use this strange resolution in the first place.
I second jeromes request. I often got such formats as 480 * 576 PAL from DVB-S.
Using IFOEDIT I could produce a DVD Image from it which burns well and could be played from the DVD Player and also WinDVD without any problem.
Unfortunaly IFOEDIT is limited when authoring more than one movie and lacks any support for menu and (graphical)chapter editing.
I like the DVD Author already very much since it provides exactly the functions I want and no gimmiks I haven't any use for.
The ONLY wish would be the possibility to suppress the DVD conformation checks when outputting. A simple (use it at your own risk)command line switch would do the job for me.
Or to get it from the other side: Why do you allow to input and process a movie in such a format when you already know that you won't allow the output from it ? 8-)
The reason why DVDauthor or any other DVd authoring program for that matter won't let you import out of spec files is simply because these programs are designed for producing fully compatible DVD's.
480x576, 544x576 is simply out of spec and will not create a DVD that conforms to spec and thus will be rejected by the program.
I think it is pointless asking the author to alter his program as I'm sure he intends the program to be fully compatible and doesn't want to cause himself headaches by people complaining that DVD's don't play correctly in their players all because the program allowed out of spec MPEG's to be impoerted.
If you want to import out of spec files at your own risk than use DVD patcher to patch the headers to the correct resolution. It should then be accepted.
Ashy,
I know that the DVD Patcher Procedure works but the disadvantage is that
the stills used to build the menu and chapter entries are shown in a horizontal compressed way with one third of the picture on the right side just black.
BTW. Your statement "The reason why DVDauthor or any other DVd authoring program for that matter won't let you import out of spec files..." is not correct.
DVDauthor LET me IMPORT the files. I can do work with them and the stills are correctly expanded to their correct aspect ratio. Only the EXPORT to the image directory fails with an error message. Most of other programs I have tested so far also allow the import of such files, which is logicaly since they are normaly able to reencode the stream (some of the programs do it brute force anyway). DVDauthor won't do any reencoding and it would be prefectly reasonable to prevent the IMPORT with an error message in this program. But this isn't done. Instead it shows me that it could do anything I want from it with my stream and only in the very final stage one gets the slap in the face. That's a bit depressing.
>Most of other programs I have tested so far also allow the import of such files, which is logicaly since they are normaly able to re-encode the stream (some of the programs do it brute force anyway).
What I meant is that that most DVD authoring programs will not let you build a compatible image from the imported file for burning directly. Of course most will let you import it, but will then re-encode it. What is the point of that I ask you?
There is no program I know of that will import, build and burn an out of spec MPEG without some sort of tinkering with the file first to fool the program or re-encoding.
Try DVDLab from mediachance.com. It is not for sale in its final version yet but claims to accept any Mpeg you are willing to try.
By the way, this program looks like it will be the TMPGEnc of DVD authoring. Enter the following directly in your browser for download and look for the DVDLab "Help files" on their website.
Another solution is to use DVD2AVI/AVISynth to resize and then reencode with TMPGEnc. I am getting some incredible results from 1080i and 720p HDTV broadcast Mpeg (but that is only after a LOT of work on interlace conversion and audio sync issues).
Just remember if you use DVD Patcher to Patch the header Back to it"s original specs after the VOB files have been made, Cuz they will not play if the Files have the wrong Header.....
Klaus thanx for notifying me. Will try it when I have time.
I also tried this tric with DVD-Patcher but this does not work.
About non-standard formats: I guess most DVD players use the same chipsets like DVB broadcast receivers (satellite, cable or terrestrial).
The MPEG2 DVB spec is much more tolerant towards picture size and bitrates.
So it is no secret that DVB-compliant files actually play, sometimes with pan&scan problems but that is a software issue of the dvd player.
I have tried 544*576 and some other formats as SVCD. If you trick out the player by settin the first frame as 480*576 2600 bps you get picture and in the good format for some seconds. But then the player hangs, i guess some buffer overflow.
Of course it is better to make standard vcd/svcd/dvd out of a recorded transmission.
Since the encoding takes a lot of time, I prefer to cut first the part out which I want, and later encode this.
That is why editing non-dvd compliant files is interesting as well.
There are hundreds of tv channels which can be streamed using a PCI-satellite card or a Nokia decoder and this becomes more and more common in the future, when cable systems also start using dvb-mpeg2.
So it is not only interesting to remove the dvd-compliant restriction, but also add some export functions for mpeg2 dvb streams!!
DVD-Patcher: You have to Patch the entire File, not only the first Header.
Both of my Players (Afreey LD2060, Denon DVD3000) are able to play 480x576(480) from DVD, but both are unable to play the 528 oder 544 sized Videos.
And the bigger Problem are Mixed resolutions and Audio-Formats on one DVD. TMPGEnc DVD Author and also DVDLab are unable to create correct DVDs out of that (tried to Mix 704x576 with AC3 and 352x576 with MPEG2-Audio).
Here's the best solution for DVDs like that: SpruceUp with a patched Supportlibs.dll! After patching the dll, SpruceUp accepts any Format (but Audio has to be converted to 48kHz). :)
How to Patch: Use a Hex-Editor like Hex-Works.
Open supportlibs.dll
Search for: 74 CE 5F 32 C0
Replace it with: 74 CE 5F B0 01
Save the dll, be happy.
Ok I think I have a solution to using out of spec MPEGs such as 480x480 or 480x576 with TMPG DVD author.
You will need an exact copy of the MPEG you wish to use then use DVD patcher to patch one of them to 720x576. Import this one into TMPG. When it comes to the menu's and chapters select the unpatched MPEG(480x576 or 480x480). This then prevents the problem of the green bar at the right hand side of the menu and the squished images.
Then just continue and create the VOBs as normal.
After authoring don't forget to patch just the main VOBS back to 480x...
1) Just another voice to ask for DVD Author to accept non standard DVD resolutions!!! Warn the use but let it continue. Have an advanced user option.
Now we have to patch the header to DVD specs for it to work.
The resulting DVDs do play fine on many DVD players and all PC players. Even play fine on the latest Sony DVD player without patching back the VOBs.
2) The current menus are very limited, allow for more user control, background music etc. I'd like the option for a single menu showing all chapters, etc.
3) I also think the cost is high, given the limited menu control. An introductory price of $39US would bring a lot more customers, could be increased as things improve.
Also, lets get the window displays sorted out.
I use an 800x600 resolution, but this cuts off some of the options in certain windows. I.E. when editing a clip.
At least add a button so the page can be maximized to whatever resolution the user is using. Not all of us have fantastic eyesight and use tiny resolutions.