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I'm trying to convert divx file into video-cd mpeg. When I play the resulting mpeg in Windows Media Player I get no sound. I loaded settings for video-cd. And the divx avi file I got has good sound. Please advise.
The audio from your divx file isn"t supported by "tmpgenc"..get "virtua dub" and extract the audio from your divx to a wav file. then encode this file as the audio source, but if your audio in your divx is "ac3" you will need a "ac3 decoder" to extract the audio to a wav file......
I know there is such thing as xsvcd, but is it better quality than svcd? If it is, how? The bitrate is much smaller and same with video size. Are there any good templates out there? Thanks!
XVCD can be better than svcd,a xvcd is just a vcd with higher bitrate so any bitrate higher than the standard vcd is a xvcd.xvcd is the way to go if you are doing mpeg1,but if you are going to crank up the bitrate a bunch you might as well do super-vcd,the super vcd"s I do have a higher bitrate than the standard super vcd..if you have a svcd with a bitrate of 2500kbs and a xvcd with 3500kbs the xvcd could be better quality but a bitrate that high with mpeg1 just isn"t practicle mught as well do super vcd,I send you some xvcd templates in your e-mail...
Im using a Sony CCD-TRV608 and saving the video via USB in MPEG format.
I have to use TMPG to convert the Default MPEG to a MPEG compliant VCD.
I have tried a number of differnet settings but get he same results. The video looks better but still the delay in sound. The default MPEG plays fine in WMPlayer but after encoding it has a delay. Im getting a 5 second delay between the video and sound once the video is burned to CD.
You are trying to make mpeg1 into vcd compliant?there are a couple of things that could work the easiyest thing would be if you captured to 352 by 240 and just put the vcd headers on the file with the "merge and cut" feature, then you wouldn"t have to encode your captures just run them through the merge and cut to put the vcd headers on and burn it to a disk.there is a feature in the "source range" were you can off-set the audio or video to a chosen time so you can sync up your file,bbmpeg has a multiplexor that you can use to off-set the audio ....just a few sugestions....
oohhh, there is a program called "mpeg vcr" that has a easy to use "multiplexor" that you can use to sync up your audio and video stream.You should be able to find a demo of the program if you search through "google".and get different burning software"Roxio" sux the big one, get "nero burning rom"
you can download a fully functioning demo from www.nero.com ........
What format is the source MPEG you have captured?
I.E what is the resolution what is the audio format?
If the audio is 441000khz MPEG1 layer2 or mp2 to give it's short name then you can simply multiplex this audio with your re-encoded MPEG (if that's even necessary)
If the file is MPEG1 it may not be necessary to re-encode at all.
Just run it through the simple multiplex option or the Merge&Cut feature in MPEGtools in TMPG and choose the MPEG1 VCD option to add the correct headers to the file to make it VCD compliant and then burn in NERO or VCDeasy.
you have to have the "dvd2avi" plugin..go into your "dvd2avi" folder and look for a file called dvd2avi.vfp and copy and paste this into your "tmpgenc" folder,or re-install "dvd2avi 1.76" on your system, either of these should work..
first you have to have the proper codecs installed on your machine,like divx 3x,4,5, and if this don"t work write back with all the specs of your avi file, like codec, frame rate ,audio format ect.and tell us what you are doing and tell us what you want to do......need lots more information..
don"t quote me on this but i think that happens if you try to join two mpeg clips that aren"t the same bitrate framerate audio format or the same headers,or different in any way..
It is just one of those stupid things that happen with all the "mpeg tools" I have certain problems with all of them accept the de-multiplex..use the source range and encode your movies into two or more parts so you don"t have to split it later.I even split my d2v files into parts so I don"t have to use the mpeg tools..
Hi. I've been getting problems where I coudn't load some of my movies in TMPGEnc. It kept crashing. Then I installed Nimo Codec with everything in it. Finally I was able to load my movies but now every time I listen to any audio, I hear static noises coming from my speakers. my speakers aren't the porblems because when I converted a movie on to a cd, my TV was making static noises. I think there's something wrong with my codecs. Will anyone be able to help me?? Thanks.
Well I think there are two things you should do,first try useing a different audio encoder try "toolame" or "scmpx" they work with "tmpgenc" as an "external tool" and allways extract the audio from your avi files and convert it to wav,most audio problems can be avoided if you do this and a better quality can be expected....
Hey. Not only am I now having problems with converting audio, I can't convert videos properly because it makes static noises. I think it has to do with the codec I installed. See, when i updated to Win Xp, I needed to install an audio codec. But when I did, it started making static noises. I'm really messed up. Sorry. Can you help me??
Totaly un-install all the audio codecs on your system and just install the ones you need and know work,and don"t play your mpeg files with windows media player,use "power dvd" or "win dvd"cuz certain combinations of codecs seem to screw with the way media player plays mpeg"s,on my system the media player plays mpegs with fuzzy sound that cut"s out all the time ,and the picture looks grainy but powerdvd plays them great.......
Hi, is anyone out there using VIDEO-CD 2.0 toolkit as authoring software ?
If so, why are my TMPGenc-converted MPEG1 files reported as "invalid" when I
try to import them as "assets". They seem to meet all the requirements (size,
framerate, bitrate etc. for VCD, but nothing doin'. Also, the extensions used
by VCD2 are greek to me, ie : .mmd for MPEG files, .spa for audio and whatnot.
The easiest solution and probably the best solution is to get rid of that crappy authoring software and get "nero burning rom" you can download it at www.nero.com .Most likely the reason why your file isn"t being recognozed as compliant is that it is just a mpeg1 file, and it has to be a mpeg1 encoded for vcd,meaning that is could have the correct audio format and the correct bitrate and frame size but it doesn"t have the proper vcd headers on it, to correct this you can load your mpeg1 file into the "merge & cut" feature choose the mpeg1/vcd setting on the top ,choose your output directory and click run, this will copy your file and put the proper headers on it......
This very old software and you should upgrade to something else.
It is a common problem with the VIDEO-CD 2.0 TOOLKIT and is the fault of TMPG.
The reason is TMPG doesn't produce 100% compliant video-cd 2.0 MPEG streams.
Most authoring programs will ignore this and burn anyway, but the VIDEO-CD 2.0 TOOLKIT is made to produce absolutely 100% MPEG1 VCD 2.0 compliant streams.
What you need to do is re-multiplex the file with VCDMUX in the TOOLKIT which will make it 100% compliant and then try again and it should be fine. (Ignore the 'Read past end of file error')
If you want my advice download NERO or VCDeasy to author and burn your MPEGs.
I'm very new to this, so please bear with me, I had converted a avi to mpeg that I downloaded off the net using TMPGEnc, then I downloaded another movie and forgot how I did the first one. I tried to convert to mpg with tmpgeng and it worked great but no audio. I don't know enough to solve this problem, please give me some advice, I would like to figure this out, the first movie I did everything worked great, I just can't remember what it was. Thanks
extract the audio first using virtual dub... I already replied to a similiar problem.. the info can be found at http://www.tmpgenc.net/cgi-bin/ebbs/board.cgi?board=tmpgenc#topic6945 .... also try encoding and hit stop after the source range reaches a minute or two... then look at the file and make sure there is ausio and video and that it is in sync...sound matches mouth moving... then if all is good hit start again and say yes to overwrite... happy encoding
Not all avi files have the same audio format,and the audio in your avi file probably not supported so you will have to get "virtua dub" to extract the audio to "wav" format and load the wav file in for the audio source..a lot of avi files downloaded of the net have vbr mp3 which "tmpgenc" doesn"t like very much....
Hi all, Iv been captureing and encodeing for a few months now. Most cartoon or CGI movies turn out pretty good, veggie tales for my kids as an example.
But when i try to convert either VHS or direct analog signal from my Dishnetwork reciever, anything real-life (ghostbusters 1, all my Enterprise series) Dont turn out quite as nice.
Iv been using these settings to get the best look but I cant help but think if Im missing a few things or should try something else.
usually for around 45 minutes of real life I capture at 2000 kbps I then use TMPG to convert my AVI also at 2000 I set motion detection at Highest quality/slowest speed. I also save as Mpeg2. This will get me on one SVCD.
35 mins all the same but i record around 2500.
My equipment is
CAP-card PCI : Pinnacle Studio DC10+
cpu and system : 800mhz Athlon Thunderbird with 320megs or pc100 and my hardrive is a ATA-66 20gig by Maxtor 7200rpm
My CAP-software : I usually use the DC10+ software that came with it, but i just rescently bought Pinnacle Studio 7. Which is its own problem. It keeps closing after opening.
anyways, does anyone have any ideas or suggestions on how to improve my quality. My picture sometimes is fuzzy or even looks like pastells when people start walking around. kinda like a smudge trail behind them.
when you capture the video up your bitrate to its max .... 10,000 for me.... encode your movie according to what bitrate you need for cd size...it will affect it slightly.. obviosly.... but I think your problem is that your capture bit-rate is too small... that or your saving it as a compressed file...save it as uncompressed... there are two codecs you can use .... I can't remember the name...but I believe it yuyv2 and the other is the huffy codec... hope this helps you out on your quality issue
I forgot one thing.... a very important thing.... some capture cards and win98/me only allow a 2 gig file to be made in avi format.... there is a way around it for the video capute....usually called sequential capture mode or something like that... and if you run NT/2K/XP ... these operating systems do not have the 2 gig file limitation... good luck and hope this works for you
>Hi all, Iv been captureing and encodeing for a few months now. Most cartoon or CGI movies turn out pretty good, veggie tales for my kids as an example.
>
>But when i try to convert either VHS or direct analog signal from my Dishnetwork reciever, anything real-life (ghostbusters 1, all my Enterprise series) Dont turn out quite as nice.
>
>Iv been using these settings to get the best look but I cant help but think if Im missing a few things or should try something else.
>
>usually for around 45 minutes of real life I capture at 2000 kbps I then use TMPG to convert my AVI also at 2000 I set motion detection at Highest quality/slowest speed. I also save as Mpeg2. This will get me on one SVCD.
>
>35 mins all the same but i record around 2500.
>
>My equipment is
>CAP-card PCI : Pinnacle Studio DC10+
>cpu and system : 800mhz Athlon Thunderbird with 320megs or pc100 and my hardrive is a ATA-66 20gig by Maxtor 7200rpm
>
>My CAP-software : I usually use the DC10+ software that came with it, but i just rescently bought Pinnacle Studio 7. Which is its own problem. It keeps closing after opening.
>
>anyways, does anyone have any ideas or suggestions on how to improve my quality. My picture sometimes is fuzzy or even looks like pastells when people start walking around. kinda like a smudge trail behind them.
>
>thanks all.
Hi Jeremy!
I too have a DC10+ card... and I too get them "pastell" colors (sometimes)...
I have some reflections reguarding that card, AMD and TMPGEnc.
It is like this:
Whenever I use TMPGEnc to encode a movie grabbed from air/VHS/LD, it seems that when I use a AMD Athlon CPU the result is shite and when i encode with a Pentium CPU (both P4 and PIII) it turns out good...
I guess that TMPGEnc doesn't work with AMD CPUs...
Tmpgenc" is optimized to work better with "pentium 3 & 4" because of the mmx and sse, but it is optimized for 3d now which I think is a AMD optimization..
Here's my advice for excellant quality captures.
Capture at no less than 640x480.
Use YUY2 and not RGB.
framerate - 23.976 fps
Capture to the DIVX pro 5.01 codec set at highest quality (2000 kb/s is far too low for high quality).
This codec has the ability to capture to progressive frames and de-interlace on the fly which should solve any interlacing artifacts or blurring problems and gives excellant results as far as de-interlacing is concerned.
If your card starts to drop frames when using the codec then set it's performance to 'Fastest'. This won't affect the quality, but will give less compression to the file.
Capture the audio to a wav not a compression codec.
When you come to encode it is pointless setting the 'Motion precision' setting to 'Highest quality' which as far as I'm concerned is a 'white elephant' as this yields very little difference if any at all compared to the 'High quality' setting and for the extra time it takes to encode you could have done something like a 3 pass encode which would give better results.
Using the SVCD(NTSC FILM) template(only if you captured to 23.976), encode to MPEG2 using the 'Constant quality(CQ)' setting and set your bitrates to min-1800 max-4000. To set this you will need to unlock the template using the 'unlock.mcf' template in the 'Extra' folder
Now encode and you should have a high quality MPEG2 file as a result.
Thanks Guys, Ill try your advice. What capture software do you recomend?
Iv noticed the supplied program that came with my board isnt gonna cut it. I think it can only capture in its own codec made by pinnacle. I did notice a section under make file which listed 12 others, example :Cinemac Codek by Radius, micrsoft RLE and H.261 and H.263 Mireo Video DV300. there were a others.
Iv been fooling around with Pinnacle Studio 7.13 but it wont let me capture more then 10 mins worth of video. I have like 14gigs free. Also the majore problem is it wants to capture around 27000 for high quality and 6500 for low quality. My max safe (and locked speed according to the program) is 6000 so I cant capture even low quality with it. Not sure why i have this problem. My read speed on the drive is like 25000 and my write speed was something like 13000. I would think a ATA-66 would run better. All cables are good and drivers are up to date.
I also im trying to get Adobe Premiere 6.0 to work but it just gives me a load error and says " The operation hase been canclled due to restrictions placed on this computer, I need to contact my system administrator. " I dont know why in the world it decided to do that.
Sorry for the run on and off topic mess i made. Maybe someone knows whats up on this. I have retried installing the capture programs and the drivers.
I just wanted to give a shot out to minion and ashy... my movies turned out perfectly... my dvd player does support xvcd.... thanx minion.. apex rules.... and my NTSCFilm plays great with no skipping, jerking, or glitches... internal 29.97 is great... ty ASHY... you guys rock
I got a question... I have been encoding for a while, but want to perfect what I am doing...not just foollow someone else's tutorial... I have graduated beyond that... the question is ...how can you tell whether the film was originally 4:3 or 16:9 and how do I choose what options I want according to this.... and the other question involves interlace... if the original file comes up as interlace do I just encode with de-interlace or use ivtc or inverse telecine...then do I usew the interlace or non-interlace? and does this matter whether its vcd...xvcd...or svcd? any insight or where to look for this would be greatly appreciated...there has to be an mpg or avi analizer that will give me this info... and on a side note ... how do I get to kazaa?
Ususaly when you load a file into "tmpgenc" the settings in tmngenc should show if it is 4:3 or 16:9 in the source file info,but another clue is that most 16:9 movies have a black bar on the top and bottom, like widescreen...ntsc movies are interlaced,I usualy use one of the de-interlace options.and if you go to "www.downloads.com" or "www.kazaa.com" you should be able to download the program.......
is it better to get rid of the interleaving and just encode as progressive? if so is this true for vcd svcd or xvcd or only some? if so which ones... is it neccesary to get rid of the interleaving or just encode as interleaved? I know how to figure out bottom or top field first and it works...but I am looking for best quality...which method is preferred for quality purposes?
Ntsc(north america,Japan)is interlaced source,and pal(europe asia)is progressive,as for the type of de-interlace to use, it depends from movie to movie.I usualy go to the "de-interlace" option screen and scan to a part of the movie that has noticeable lines and just experiment with the settings till I find the one that looks best,I don"t screw with the inverce telecline it"s not for fixing interlace lines, it is for takeing non-interlaced 30fps avi and converting it to a 24fps mpeg.If you live in north america and you are ripping "dvd"s you probably never use the "inverce telecline(ivtc)"...
Just one or two corrections.
PAL is indeed interlaced not progressive, but doesn't have the same problem as NTSC interlaced movies due to the fact there is no 3:2 puldown added.
IVTC is for fixing interlacing problems related to movies which are 29.97 fps interlaced movies which were originally 23.976 progressive FILM and have 3:2 pulldown added.
It simply removes the 3:2 pulldown of interlaced movies and returns them back to their original 23.976 fps progressive FILM state.
If you don't use the 'ForcedFILM' option of DVD2AVI then this is the option you should use.
The decision whether to use this or the 'Forced FILM' option depends on whether DVD2AVI reports the movie as FILM and you are encoding to MPEG2.