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I have some MPEG2 files that were creted using a hardware encoder that I want to burn on to DVD. The files were created to be either S-VCD compatible or DVD compatible. Can I use TMPGEnc for creating the VIDEO_TS files? If not what other software can I use?
>I have some MPEG2 files that were creted using a hardware encoder that I want to burn on to DVD. The files were created to be either S-VCD compatible or DVD compatible. Can I use TMPGEnc for creating the VIDEO_TS files? If not what other software can I use?
>
>Thanks
Hello Krish,
AFAIK 'TMPGEnc' is only an encoder. To create VIDEO_TS files as exist on a standard DVD you have to author your *.mpg files you already have (for example with 'TMPGEnc DVD Author') and then burn them on a DVD (why not Nero, but other programms are also suitable). I think 'TMPGEnc DVD Author' has also itself an internal burning procedure.
Hi guys, i have a problem. I have a few videos that are good quality that im putting on DVDs later, but the problem is when i convert them to mp2, the black lines from the top of the video and from the bottom dissapear.
What option do i need to set so that i will be able to keep these lines there?
Please e-mail me. :) Zlatko@europe.com or Ihatenato@hotmail.com, also try to add me on msn if you ahve it too..thanks
I just started scratching the surface of burning DVD's and it seems the deeper I dig into the DVD burning world, the more confused I get.
So far I have been using DVD Shrink a simple point and click program that seems to simply copy the movie that I RENT and in turn activates Nero on it's own and burns the movie.
A friend of mine suggested I use this program but I have no idea where to start and have looked through every help file.
All I wish to do is download movies from various sites, File Transfer Programs and burn them to my DVD+R's that I buy in an abundance.
In turn these questions arise.
What file types should I be downloading?
In Newby terms what does TEMPgenc do?
What settings should I be using on TEMPgenc
Once the file is encoded, what file type am I looking for and what program is the easiest for me to use for burning the movie to my DVD+R's?
Any other tips and things I haven't considered would be appreciated
Be prepared to wade through about 30 or so different programs just to find the 6 or so programs you really like.
As far as what TMPGEnc is used for, it can demultiplex (split the audio and video streams) and multiplex (combine streams) MPG movie files, and can edit, filter, and re-encode AVI files to MPG movie files or elementary streams.
VCD, SVCD, and DVD formats all require MPG encoded video, which makes TMPGEnc the ONLY good choice for quality conversions of AVI -> VCD, SVCD, and DVD.
I have just finished authoring a dvd without a menu - I wanted to start the movie right away and expected the dvd player to display its main screen after the movie finished playing. Instead the movie stopped displaying the last frame of the movie (black) until I switch the player off.
For menu-less DVDs, it plays like this. Once you press play (or if the DVD player auto-starts when the disc is in), the movie starts playing automatically. When it finishes, the disc stops. DVD players never plays the last few frames/seconds of a video. So it's best to add some extra blank frames there.
Hi, I have a real newbie question. I saved a bunch of recordings captured on an old ATI Rage 128 Pro AiW card in MPEG-2 format, 720x480, NTSC (525 lines). I realize now that my choice was sub-optimal for using the files to create SVCD's, but it's too late now.
I'm trying to salvage them by using TMPGEnc to re-encode the files into a more SVCD-friendly 480x480 resolution, but what seems to happen is the top and bottom (and possibly the left and right) get cropped off.
I used the standard SVCD template, and selected a source aspect ratio of 1:1 and a video arrange method of "Center (custom size) - 720x480" (in the Advanced tab). I've tried various other settings, but I can't seem to prevent the cropping. Am I doing something wrong, or am I just asking the tool to do something it can't do?
I like TMPGEnc, think it's really cool, but getting the right settings is really confusing me. :(
Newbie here. Can use some help--- I;m trying to encode an .AVI file to scvd. After going thru the settings and start encode I get an error message, Unalbe to load p3 package. What am I doing wrong?
thankx, Altdog
Hi, I have a real newbie question. I saved a bunch of recordings captured on an old ATI Rage 128 Pro AiW card in MPEG-2 format, 720x480, NTSC (525 lines). I realize now that my choice was sub-optimal for using the files to create SVCD's, but it's too late now.
I'm trying to salvage them by using TMPGEnc to re-encode the files into a more SVCD-friendly 480x480 resolution, but what seems to happen is the top and bottom (and possibly the left and right) get cropped off.
I used the standard SVCD template, and selected a source aspect ratio of 1:1 and a video arrange method of "Center (custom size) - 720x480" (in the Advanced tab). I've tried various other settings, but I can't seem to prevent the cropping. Am I doing something wrong, or am I just asking the tool to do something it can't do?
I like TMPGEnc, think it's really cool, but getting the right settings is really confusing me. :(
Well you could just leave it as it is and not bother re-encoding. Just simply run it through the 'Simple multiplexer' in the MPEG tools using the SVCD option and burn as normal.
This way you will maintain maximum quality and your DVD player should handle it fine.
If you still want to re-encode then use the settings below.
Under advanced tab:-
Bear in mind SVCD will always look compressed when played in a non SVCD capable player such as Mediaplayer. You will need a real MPEG2 player such as Windvd.
Nope, the re-encoding settings didn't work. :( I understand that the SVCD file will look compressed on Mediaplayer, because it doesn't 'know' that the file will be played back using a stand-alone DVD player; it just 'knows' that the file frames are 480x480, so it displays the SVCD as looking squashed. But what I don't understand is why TMPGEnc clipped off the tops and bottoms of the frames during the encoding process.
I would rather not bother with re-encoding, but I'm trying to get the file size down to where I can burn it onto a CD-R rather than a DVD-R.
I would really appreciate any more advice you could give me! Thank you! :)
Nope, the re-encoding settings didn't work. :( I understand that the SVCD file will look compressed on Mediaplayer, because it doesn't 'know' that the file will be played back using a stand-alone DVD player; it just 'knows' that the file frames are 480x480, so it displays the SVCD as looking squashed. But what I don't understand is why TMPGEnc clipped off the tops and bottoms of the frames during the encoding process.
I would rather not bother with re-encoding, but I'm trying to get the file size down to where I can burn it onto a CD-R rather than a DVD-R.
I would really appreciate any more advice you could give me! Thank you! :)
Make sure you haven't actuall got a check mark in the cropping option under the advanced settings.
What does the image look like in the preview before encoding?
(a little less) lost and confused
2005-01-03 14:15:25 ( ID:1i8na1gkafw )
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Nope, cropping isn't enabled. The preview does show the the same truncated frame that is produced; thank you for suggesting looking at it before running the encoding. :)
I did find a workaround after reading and searching a few message boards all night... I used Virtual Dub to resize the frame, and then frameserve the result to TMPGEnc for encoding. Perhaps not the most elegant solution, but it works well (and reasonably quickly), and the final output looks great!
Now my only problem is that the audio and video have gotten out of sync somehow... the original wasn't perfectly sync'd correctly (drift), but my final file is off by about 4 seconds at the beginning, and over 10 seconds at the end (two hour capture).
Funny thing is, I ran a small test case using a custom setting to save an SVCD-compliant file (instead of the 720x480 one that's causing the problems), and demuxing and remuxing it doesn't appear to create any sync issues.
Maybe I should consider giving up on trying to make SVCDs and use the files to make mini-DVDs as is described in pcphotovideo.com
ashy, thank you for your patience, help, and suggestions! :)
I am having trouble when add file which I copied from VCD. When I add a large file (>300mb) it takes a long time to load, and when the cpu load go back to normal (<10%) the software pop up with an "Divided by 0" error.
However, when I tried with a smaller file (<10mb), from the same VCD disk, it goes fine, I can edit the video.
I am wondering what I am doing wrong that is causing this problem, I have tried reinstalling it. I have a 1.8gHz CPU and about 20gb of space left.
When I browse an avi file, it said "File " xxxxxxxxx" can not open, or not supported." But I have install The codec and cannot play the movie in Window media player. What should I set to let the avi file accept for converting?
Thanks in advance.