This forum is for users to exchange information and discuss with other users about a TMPGEnc product.
In case you need official support, please contact TMPG Inc.
Pegasys Products BBS [ Sorted by thread creation date ]
Sorry, I'm used to unix programs--which recompress each file. Files split w/ tmpeg are the same quality of the original? I guess that was my original question.
If the trial has ended then you can"t encode to Mpeg2 anymore But you should be able to encode to mpeg1/VCD forever...have you tried raiseing the "Direct show"???
When I try to open a DVD2AVI project file, it says "cannot open or unsupported"... I've formatted my PC last week... and after that I couldn¡t load the DVD2AVI project¡s into TMPGEnc (as I made before).
I am trying to convert a movie i have downloaded from Shadow Movie Realm. When i try to open any movies to convert them with TMPGEnc it says the movie cannot be opened or is unsupported. what is the problem?
HELPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I am following this DVD2DVD guide (http://www.digitalforums.com/dvd2dvdr/intro.htm)
I am to the step where I amn using TMPGEnc and the guide is telling me this process should take at most 6 hours.... It's gone for 9 hours and the project is only 2% done. What can I do to speed this up??? Is it really this hard to recreate DVD's????
Thanks,
Speedy
Since the Link you posted doesn"t go anywere I Don"t know what method they got you useing to Make a DVD Backup..And the speed of the encodeing depends on the speed of your computer and You will have to have a Very fast computer to encode a DVD To a DVD in 6 hours especially with Tmpgenc which is one of the slower encoders arround..The correct method Involves Ripping the Vob file to your DRive and then useing DVD2AVI to extract the audio and make a D2V frame server file then useing Tmpgenc to encode the D2V and the Audio to a Mpeg2 file for DVD..If your Instructions have you useing a Differant method than the one i basicly explained then I would consider useing a Different method...
i know this has been answered several times...but i need to convert an avi file with 5 channels....to wav form to encode in tmpg....simple explanations only please...lol
thanks for bearing with me....
What you have is a 5 Chanell Dolby Digital audio track and you can extract this audio track to a Wav file with a Program called "AVI-MuX" it will de-Mux the audio from the video and Uncompress it to a WAV file....
tried that one already minion....but when it extracts the audio it comes out choppy...i.e ...sound goes on and off very quickly..if u get the jist.
i have 2 files that are the same format...both come out the same.
Ive tried alsorts short of recording the wav externally...last resort
heres the details of the files...
There is a Version Of "Virtual dub" that supports AC3 audio it is called Virtual-Dub AC3, I think you can get it here "http://www.apachez.net/"..You can use "AVI-Mux" to Just De-Mux the file ,That shouldn"t make it choppy then use "Headac3he" to encode it to whatever you want...
na...no go...the problem seems to that if i extract the audio file...with say virtualdub or nandub or avimux the the resulting file comes out invalid or corrupt...it plays but but like i say..its choppy.
in virtualdub it will only extract as a direct stream copy not full processing
tried that ashy....it come out choppy but faster...so tried it off the top of my head at 100 preroll and 100 interleave and yahoooooo....perfect sound.will try it now in tmpg....thnx guys...u doin swell job on advice
So what I gather from what you are saying is that you want a series of Jpeg"s encoded into single Mpeg frames and you want it to be exported from the premier timeline...I suppose it is Possible ,What is the purpose of this Because there might be an Easier way Cuz if you just want these Key frames to be images so you can use them as Menu"s in a DVD/SVCD/VCD Project then you can do it with most authoring programs while authoring....If you have an Mpeg encoder Plugin for Premier you Can export these frames directly to an encoder directly from the timeline...
A quick question regarding TMPGEnc's MPEG2 capabilities:
We have a project that currently runs as a CD-Rom Multimedia app that allows the user select a series of mpegs. Pretty straight forward stuff. So much so that we were thinking of 'enhancing' it to run as DVD-Video, so it can run off home TV's and the like. Baring in mind that this will be our first foray into DVD-Video, does anyone have any experience of using TMPGEnc to create MPEG-2's for this format. Any compatability issues and whatnot? I realise most of you will be biased here ;) but is there a more 'industry standard' method of creating MPEG-2s?
I guess what I'm really asking is TMPEnc capable of creating the kind of quality you get on movie DVDs?
Well yes and no...Tmpgenc has Good mpeg2 encodeing abilities better than Most encoders But not all...As long as the Source file is of pristene Quality then the output video should be of Simular quality..There are better Mpeg2 encoders But they also cost a lot more money,If you want to e-mail me I"l give you a list of software that will make your project easier...
When trying to open an piece of video which has been captured directly from the Mini DV Camcorder I am able to open the AVI in TMPGEnc and create resulting MPEG file, however, when I use Adobe Premier V6 to create an AVI (from a selection of video clips) I recieve the following message frin TMPGEnc when trying to open the AVI:
File 'XXXXXXXX.avi' can not open, or unsupported.
Any help for a beginner in this area would be appreciated.
Was it an DivX-AVI with MP3-Sound?
If it so, the try to convert the Audio-Part to WAV first (VirtualDub) to encode Audio and Video separatly. Or use VirtualDub als Frameserver.
Yes, It was an MP3 audio.
I used dvd2svcd for conversion, and it's not possible for me to use separate video and audio files (dvd2svcd want *.avi source file only !).
The only way is to set the "rate control mode" (in dvd2svcd) NOT in 2 pass VBR.
All the others settings are good, (TMPGEnc no errors !!), but the quality......
Hi, I got a question - is it possible to convert an *.ifo file (ripped from a DVD, including all necessary *.vob files) directly to a mpeg video file? I know some other programmes that are able to do this but I think there might be a loss of qualitiy when converting videos with those other programmes.
Additionally, in the *.ifo file there is more information such as available languages and / or subtitles which might make converting more comfortable.
Please answer if you know anything! Thanks in advance!
I'm trying to convert a quicktime MOV file to VCD format: What a nightmare.
The file MOV to MPG VCD conversion stalls at 12% each time I try it.
So I thought I would try converting to AVI first, and then going AVI to VCD. This appeared to work okay (it didnt stall at 12%). But when I played the AVI file, colors were a mess, there were red, green, and blue horizontal lines through the entire video, all of the action scenes were basically grayscale, each frame basically consisted of 3/4 of one frame and 1/4 of another frame, and the entire video displayed at about a 25 degree angle.
There HAS to be a way to make this conversion. I'd appreciate any suggestions!