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TMPGEnc 2.5 (Free or plus version) BBS [ Sorted by thread creation date ]
My knowledge of TMPGenc is very very basic and so basically I will just load up a file and then convert it usually altering no settings at all. So my question is this, what settings should I edit to reduce the file size of an mpeg file (whilst still retaining decent audio and visual quality) and where are those settings located? If anyone has any advice about compressing the file as another format (although Im hoping only to work with mpegs and avi's) in other programs instead then that will be appreciated too.
HELLO GUYS
I am new and I need to transfer a 480 MB AVI file to DVD or to SVCD in order to burn it on DVD or CD. ?
Can anyone help with this > and how long should it take...it took me about 8 hours to encode it..Many thanks for all your tech help.
Regards,
WILLY
I have converted tons of DV material already but now I have a serious problem.
The source has lots of fast motion in it, and when I convert the source to mpeg2(doesn't matter which format) the picture is kind of jumpy, jerky and stuttering.
CCE is able to convert the DV source correctly, but I need the filters so I have to use Tmpgenc. Maybe I should try AVISynth
It looks like Tmpgenc removes to many information so fast movements are not smooth anymore.
Following settings:
DC component precision = 10
Motion search precision = Very Slow
Field order = Tried both
Filters = Deinterlace
Use floating point DCT = Tried both
Detects scene changes = On
I also have this problem with some Avi's and DivX's where it jitters every second or half second.. i have only used TMPGenc simply to convert avi>dvd or divx>dvd and have no experience in setting any other parameters... it mostly does what i ask it.. but i would dearly love to get rid of the jitter
BobMcN
Also, my other files don't have the correct proportion either. Here's what GSpot says:
Resolution: 634x464 (1.34:1) [~16:12]
Should I still do the Center like above? Also, the audio codec is MPEG-1 Layer 3. It plays in Windows Media Player but in Virtualdub and VDubMOD, it said it could not decompress the audio. Why is that? Should I just convert it normally in TMPGEnc?
Center (without anything) is the best choice if TMPGEnc has not to do any resizing. If the Input size is the same than the Output size, always use Center.
Your second Movie seams to be 4:3 (something like that...).
For a propper fit i suggest to clip it to 628x464.
Use Center (Custom size) 688,464
Target size is 704x480 (NOT 720x480)!
Thanks. Is there a difference between Center and Full Screen? I thought the output size is 720x480 because that's the standard? Then the input size (704x480) is not the same as the output size...?
I agree I have recently been trying out the new LANCZOS4 resizer in AVISYNTH with excellent results.
Reduces mice teeth and stair stepping to a minimum and are hardly noticible when compared to some other resizing methods.
Are there any websites that contain sample avi's and their corresponding TMPGenc encoded mpeg2 files (along with settings used to encode) so that we could use them for comparison? I have been tinkering with video for over a year now and I have yet to produce an mpeg2 file that I am satisfied with the quality. It would be nice to see compare my encoded video with others.
I'm trying to convert a movie of mine (XVID... yes I have the codec), it's 2:02:12 long. Unfortunately, TMPGEnc thinks its 330+ mins long. Last I checked, 2 * 60 + 2 = 122 minutes. Is it me screwing up, or is this a known isssue?
Why can't I convert avi to mepg? It used to work fine until I rebooted my computer because of a virus. It say (File C:AnimeNaruto77.avi can not open, or unsupported). Any Suggestion?
I'm trying to convert a movie of mine (XVID... yes I have the codec), it's 2:02:12 long. Unfortunately, TMPGEnc thinks its 330+ mins long. Last I checked, 2 * 60 + 2 = 122 minutes. Is it me screwing up, or is this a known isssue?
Hi Nic. The file I'm converting (well, trying to) is a 22-min episode, with file size 177, 238 KB, which when I played using realplayer was ok. When I tried converting, the file size as noted in the counter was 600+ MB (63 min), when normally a file size that small would only be 200+ MB. Ok, I've tried the source range thing which you have advised but after converting, there was no sound. What steps should I do now? Thanks for your help.
I have exactly the same problem...
When encoding a 1hr30'ish movie TMPG wants to make it huge with about 8Gb of data rather than about 3.5Gb (which is normal) - this is usually Particular DivX movies (you know, the ones you REALLY want to watch) Perhaps i will try the '-1' thing the last port mentioned
Well.. i tried the change the video size from '-1' to 'last frame' business... and all i got was a small box in the middle of the screen with an error... the more i clicked on 'ok' the more another one came back !! i had to abort in the end...
Bugger !
I have been running into the same problems, video legnth being doubled, and no sound when selecting the video length. I found this advice on a forum it seems to work on the problem files I had.
["This is usually caused by the compression on the audio of the source file. If it is an AVI file it is very common. With an AVI file the easiest things to do here are set DirectShow Multimedia File Reader's priority to 2 or even better demcompress the audio!
To change the priority of DirectShow, this is done simply by clicking option - environmental setting. Click the VFAPI plug-in tab. You will see DirectShow in the list usually with a priority of -1. Right click on the NAME (not the priority) and click higher priority until the priority is 2 and it is at the top of the list. "]
Name all the files in sequence like this for example: Movie001.MPG, Movie002.MPG, Movie003.MPG then open TMPG and goto Options>Enviromental settings>General then put a check in the box 'Open sequence files as a movie'
Now just load the first file in the sequence and the rest will automatically load.
I think I may have misread what you want.
It looks like you have already encoded the files.
You have 2 choices you can either join the MPEGs together with the merge and cut tool or just burn the MPEGs to VCD and just load each MPEG into your burning program in sequence then burn.
The files will play as one without pauses, but you must make sure that you instruct your burning program NOT to put pauses between file.
Most of them automatically put a 2sec pause between files, so make sure you set the pause length to 0
Hi there,
I am using TMPGenc Plus 2.5 to encode from DV to MPEG2(for burning to dvd). I think I have all the best settings that I can possibly have for encoding to the Mpeg2 file. But the resultant MPEG file lacks the quality of the original DV, in that it is slightly more grainy and the colours are too bright. (I am using Windvd to compare quality) I have read in forums that the codec that tmpgenc uses for reading the DV file can effect the encoded output, if so does anyone know how I can check what codec that tmpgenc is using and also recommend the best codec to use?
Thanks in advance.
TMPGEnc uses the installed Codec, nothing special. But TMPGEnc always needs RGB24-Input and some DV-Codecs aren't able to provide a propper Colorspace-Conversion. Maybe you have to cange the settings from CCIR- to YCbCr-Mode (setting->advanced->Quantize Matrix) to get the correct colors.
You can't use such crappy Software like a Software-DVD-Player to compare quality because you can't be shure about the resulting Luma-Range and the Methode of Overlay-Video on your PC.
The Quality of the resulting Video depents on several factors, most important is Bitrate.
Also rememeber that Mpeg and NTSC DV use different color sampling (4:2:0 vs 4:1:1).
You will ALWAYS lose half of the original color samples when translating between the two.
This is why it is shocking that the DV standard has not been upgraded to 4:2:2. 25 Mbs is enough bandwidth to save virtually lossless production quality video (using mpeg2, 2 frame GOP, for example). If digital cameras kept the same technology curve as DV video, we'd still be using 0.5 megapixel cameras.