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I used DVD2AVI and created a .D2V file. Some directions I have states that I need to download VFAPI plug-in in order for TMPGEnc to recognize the .D2V as a legal file type. I can't seem to find a download link that works. Please help.
One note I found said you can download it from TMPGEnc's homepage, but I sure don't find it there.....
You don't need the VFAPI plugin for DVD2AVI project files. The TMPG VFAPI plugin is so TMPG can read it's own project files and is already included with the TMPG download.
Just copy DVD2AVI.vfp from the DVD2AVI folder into your TMPG folder. If you still have problems raise it's priority in the VFAPI plugins.
I'm new to this so please forgive me if this has been asked before.
I've recently downloaded some AVI files which I'd like to convert to VCD format. I have other software which copies directly from DVD to VCD and the video quality is excellent, even with just VCD settings.
However, after I've encoded the AVI using TMPGenc to MPG format, I played the MPG file on my PC and it was fine, but then using the same software that I used to copy DVD's, I copy the MPG image to VCD, and the video quality is very poor and choppy, but the audio is fine.
Could anyone please help me and tell me if there are any settings I should be doing in TMPGEnc to create a higher quality MPG file? I don't know if my player supports SVCD files or not.
I've used VCDeasy to create the VCD from DVD's and MPG but the quality is different. I obviously can appreciate that DVD quality is better to begin with, and if this is why the result is so different, then so be it. But if anyone also knows settings for VCD easy that have worked for them, I'd really appreciate it.
If the Playback is Choppy then that could be because of many things But usually because you have encoded to the wrong Frame rate..You have to find out the Frame rate of your AVI file then encode to that Frame rate, if you use a Frame rate that is Different that the AVI files frame rate then you will get this Jumpy effect when watching .....
I set up 8 projects last night. All about hour clips. It highlighted them all and hit run. I woke up to find 4 done. What about the rest. Then I did the same with the remaining 4. Well i come home and it stopped after 2. What gives? I know my system can handle it. Any suggestions?
I have a SVCD version of a movie here. My stand-alone player tho only plays VCDs, so I wanted to use TMPGEnc to convert the file (AVSEQ01.MPG of the SVCD) into MPEG1 to burn it on a VCD. But as soon as I select this file for import, the HD works but the program hangs and after a while I have to close it via Windows Task Manager.
You need to copy the file to the hard drive first. It's not a good idea to try and work directly from a disk like this as you will have problems, as you have noticed. It's not hanging, but just loading the file very very slowly.
Read error occurred at address 00402F40 of Module 'TMPGenc.exe' with 6461654E
this is what happens when I just tried encoding one of my .avi files, after not being able to open it in the program, but then i had put the priority option of DIRECTSHOW up to 2, and it allowed me to open it, but when I hit "START" to encode the problem at the top is what occurrs.
Error/Program Closes When I try to load .asf and .avi file
Its worked for most asf files and avi files and mpg files, but I got a few files that I want to convert to mpeg for a VCD, but when I open them the program immediately says theres an error and closes.
Make sure you have the Latest WMV/WMA Codecs installed, and if you still have Problems go to "Options" to "Enviromental Settings" to Vfapi Plugins" and Raise the "Direct Show" to "2"..And see if that helps..And I warn you that you might not get any Audio output from your ASF Files cuz Tmpgenc can sometimes have problems with the WMA audio format used By ASF Files, it is a Good idea to encode the audio with a different audio encoder....
1. MyDVD-4, when it comes time to burn, gives an error message that the data rate is too fast for DVD. I adjusted the bit rate down to 5000 and I still got this error message. Any suggestions?
2. Also, do you agree that TMPG Enc. is the best software encoder? If I were to encode the video and audio together in TMPG, would that be a tragedy? I am doing home movies only.
To avoid any quality tragedies, encode at a high bitrate for making archival files and then re-encode down to DVD bitrates. At 12+ Mbs, TMPG is pretty much lossless, even with Hi8 source. Data storage quality DVD-Rs are cheap.
DVD-Video can support over 9 Mbs video + audio. But there is no need to push things that much. For a program to reject the file when loading, the nominal bitrate setting of the file may be to high. Use bitrate.exe (google search) to see what the setting is and whether the file peaks too high.
Make sure the max setting for VBR is below 9. This gets recorded as the nominal bitrate in the file (I believe)
You are Probably getting that error about the Bitrate being to high even when you set it at 5000kbs because Tmpgenc has terrorable Bitrate controll so even though the bitrate is set at 5000kbs the actual bitrate can spike Much higher than that at at times and there isn"t much you can do to get tmpgenc to obey the Bitrate setting you choose, even with CBR encodeing Tmpgenc will spike Much higher that you set it..And Is Tmpgenc the best Mpeg encoder?? Well that is a Matter of opinion but I think for the Price and for all the Options it has that it is the best Value, but for Plain Mpeg2 encodeing Quality I still Think CCE SP is a Superior Mpeg2 encoder,But Tmpgenc is definately the Better of the two with Mpeg1 encodeing Quality.....
Thanks for your responses. Btw, I went ahead (against many's advice)and encodee video and audio, elementary stream - - thus producing an m2v and mp2 file. I am doing home movies, so I don't need studio quality (unless there's another issue I'm not realizing).
I burned a 15 second stream on my DVD-RW disc and it seemed to work OK. I then proceeded to test a longer stream. I re-encoded the same file, deleted the previous video and audio file from the MyDVD desktop, overwrote the previous files on my hard drive (did name them the same), and erased my DVD-RW disc in order to burn a new stream. The wierd thing is that my DVD kept on playing the same 15 second stream over and over - - even know the longer stream I encoded and wanted to test, and thought I had burned, was around 7 minutes!
Does anyone know why this same 15 second stream keeps on playing?!
I believe the fact that I saved the new, longer files under the same name might have triggered a temp file. And, that is why it keeps burning the same 15 second clip.
Anyway, with CCE software, is the basic version better than TMPG Enc. as well?
I don't get it....
I can't seem to make this work for some reason....here's the problem,
I can encode the file, I can then transfer the file on to a CD (making it a VCD)using NERO burning rom.....AND.....it works Perfectly....BUT !!!
when I play it back on the DVD player....I get some type of weird movements after a character moves (I'm trying to make anime VCD's). I think you call em ghosts or something like that. I used the option of "ghost reduction" in the "settings" menu....but that didn't really make a difference.
Then after that, I put the "motion search precision" to HIGHEST, in the settings --- > Video tab. That made some difference...a good considerable one, however, they still appear. You can still notice them. Is there any way I can get rid of them....
~~ PLZ HELP !!!!!!
P.S. - I also set the "Directshow Multimedia File Reader" to level 2
Sounds like you have set the field order wrong. You can run this file through a program called pulldown.exe and it's GUI to change the field order or just encode again using the opposite field order.
I don't get it....
I can't seem to make this work for some reason....here's the problem,
I can encode the file, I can then transfer the file on to a CD (making it a VCD)using NERO burning rom.....AND.....it works Perfectly....BUT !!!
when I play it back on the DVD player....I get some type of weird movements after a character moves (I'm trying to make anime VCD's). I think you call em ghosts or something like that. I used the option of "ghost reduction" in the "settings" menu....but that didn't really make a difference.
Then after that, I put the "motion search precision" to HIGHEST, in the settings --- > Video tab. That made some difference...a good considerable one, however, they still appear. You can still notice them. Is there any way I can get rid of them....
~~ PLZ HELP !!!!!!
P.S. - I also set the "Directshow Multimedia File Reader" to level 2
You Might be seeing Interlace Artifacts..Does it mostly happen around the edges of poeple and objects especially when they are movieing or the camera is Panning???If so you might want to check that your Field order is set correctly in Tmpgenc and if it persists you might consider useing one of the De-Interlace filters to see if that clears it up..I know with My DVD Player and TV I have to use a De-Interlace filter every time I make NTSC format SVCD because I get really bad interlace artifacts....
Well you Didn"t look Very Hard, there are 16 different De-Interlace Filters to choose from in Tmpgenc..Click "Setting" then go to "Advanced" and in that list there will be a "De-Interlace Filter" Put a Check Mark in the Box next to it then Double Click the Filter and a Window will pop up with your Movie displayed in it and a Drop Down menu with a Bunch of different Filters, Use The Slider to Navigate to were the effect is Really Bad then Try some of the Filters in the Dropdown List, Usually either "Even Field" or "Odd Field" will work best...There are Many Filters in the "Advanced settings" that you can try but they do slow down the encodeing depending on the Filter used and the amount of filter used...