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I have been trying to get Ulead MF to accept my TMPGnec MPEG2 clips, but it will not accept any audio. Ulead keeps telling me its an incorrect audio stream or something to that effect. I have tried ES audio/video and System audio/video and neither are accepted by Ulead MF. MPEG1,2 and PCI have also been tried. What is the common parameters for TMPGnec when converting for Ulead with sound? I really like DVDlab, but that program definetly wants you to do your own sound seperately. Is there a simple guide on how to encode your sound seperately, then merge it with your video? I am using TMPGnec instead of having Ulead MF to do my compessing.
Below is the reason im using TMPGnec. But the guide does not say much on what audio to use.
Taken from Guide:
Convert your videoclips to standard DVD MPEG using TMPGEnc or some other good DVD Encoder. You could let Ulead DVD Moviefactory convert your video to DVD MPEG, but it is a bit slow at encoding and the video quality may not be as good as other encoders.
Well DVD Compliant Audio is "Wav/PCM ,Ac3(Dolby Digital) and Mpeg1 Layer 2, and the Audio frequency for all these Formats has to be 48000hz, But For some reason I thing the DVD Movie Factory only accepts Mpeg1 Layer 2 audio, and Tmpgenc will only Give you either Wav/PCM audio or Mpeg audio...
I've encoded an AVI video for VCD. It comes out great, and plays well on computers, but when playing on a stand-alone player it has problems.
The movie starts with a black screen and has black screens here and there for transitions. Playback really gets goofy when the opening fades in from black for a couple of seconds, then fades out again. On playback it's suddenly there, then gone, then it "freezes" again till motion kicks in again. It seems as if the player wants to treat these black frames (or even those with little or no motion) as non-exsistent. Upon playing, once the video contains motion etc... the player tries to catch up, but by that time there's no audio and it's all out of whack.
Is this a problem with the player, or can I encode the video in a way that will tell the player to process those frames? Can forcing frame types do the trick? The player does a great job running MPEGs, it just seems to not like "empty" frames.
Actually what it sounds like to me is you are Suffering from Bitrate Spikes, when you get Bitrate spikes it seems like the Video cuts in and Out and/Or Plays slowly with the audio Playing at regular speed, if this sound like your Problem let me know...
There are problems with parts of the video that don't seem like they should have a dramatic change in rate. It also seems to want to stop in darker scenes of the video as well. The audio never gets going on playback as it comes in after the video (and the problems) start.
So you believe it could be caused by a spike in the bitrate? I guess I've got to look at that. If I do find this to be the case, what suggestions would you have for smoothing things out?
I'm really enjoying TMPGEnc to encode lots of svcd's with standalone DVD player.
Now I'd like to combine standard svcd mpeg-2 video and non-standard ac3 audio to mux as standard svcd since standard svcd format allows mpeg-2 video(480x480/576) and mpeg-1 layer 2 audio(stereo only!).
Normal dvd player supports ac3 decoding or transporting to decoder.
Any idea to do make this happen?
When I simply think that dvd plays ac3 audio, if there is any way to present ac3 audio to dvd player to accept and play, it'll be great.
UMmm..The chances of your DVD Player being able to Play SVCD"s with AC3 audio are Very Very Very Low, and if the AC3 is Surround sound the Chances are even smaller..Once the DVD Player sees that it is a CD-r being Loaded into it and not a DVD it will disable the AC3 decoder and enable the Mpeg audio decoder because there is no Video standard on CD-r that supports AC3, And even after you manage to Mux the AC3 to the SVCD Video file you will have a Really hard Time Finding a Program that will Burn it to Disk..But if you want to Try well then you can use "BBMpeg" or "Mpeg2Vcr 3.14" to mux the AC3 to the SVCD Video file...I have had Minimal success with SVCD"s with AC3 audio But I did a Lot of research before Buying my DVD Player and My dvd Player is One of the Very Few that will Play SVCD"s with AC3 audio but Only on some Brands of CD-RW not Regular CD=r"s, and there is No way to add Chapters or any Special features to the DVD Cuz the Only Program I could find that would bun these Files to Disk was Nero with the Compatibility Disabled...well Good Luck
Thanks a lot.
I understand that there is a chance to mux svcd with ac3. You didn't mention that you succeeded svcd with ac3 5.1 channels. Did you make it?
I have nero and panasonic 533k dvdplayer. Which model you have? Thanks again.
Well I could not Get Dolby 5.1 to play only AC3 Sterio audio and it would only work on CD-RW"s not CD-R"s, with Dolby 5.1 the Audio file size is extremely Large especially if you are putting it on a CD-r so you might only be able to get 25 minutes on a CD-RW cut the 5.1 audio file is so Big..The Generic DVD Players are the Best if you want to Play Non-Standard VCD/SVCD"s, Brands like "ApeX" will Handle Higher Bitrates and More Formats as opposed to Sony or Panasonic ..My Player is Made by a Company Called "ElectroHome" and it Plays Pretty much everything...
I am doing my first steps with creating a DVD copy. First I ripped everything correctly with the Smart Ripper, but the created file is to big (over 5 GB). I just want to use TMPGENC to reduce the file size. By trying to open my file I am always getting the message File "..." can not open, or unsupported.
NO It isn"t, A m2v file is a Mpeg Video file Not an AVI file, The Correct way to Encode Vob/M2V files off of a DVD is To first Use "DVD2AVI" to make a D2v Project File for frameserveing then Load the D2V file into Tmpgenc and encode it to DVD Specs, This method os Better that Just loading the M2V file into Tmpgenc Because Tmpgenc needs Specific Mpeg2 decoders Installed on the Computer to Decode the M2V file and thos Decoders aren"t As good or as Fast as useing DVD2AVI to do the decodeing and Frameseve the file to Tmpgenc..There are Guides on useing this Method to Back up DVD"s at "http://www.dvdrhelp.com/"..
I have used TMPG for a long time with no trouble, but now every time I use it I get read errors during encoding. All take take teh form 'Read error occurred at the address 000E0C72 of module 'TMPGnc.exe' with 00000068'
I have tried uninstalling and re-installing different version but it does not fix it.
If it is a DivX or XviD file Follow the Advice Given in the Post Below this one, Read errors can also be caused By Corrupted Files of Which Downloaded Movies are notorius for....
These are any file type, AVI, MPEG. They are also files that have been downloaded and converted before so I don't think they are corrupt, unless my PC has had a virus. I have also had a similar error message but ending in P3Package.DLL.
I read elsewhere on this board that such errors may be to do with RAM, but I am running with 512, so unless that has become faulted in anyway it can't be that
I sincerely doubt the problem has to do with bad RAM - I am experiencing the problem on all three of my computers... when I never had any problems before. I suspect the problem is related to a codec - specifically an Xvid codec - as I only have the problem on videos encoded with xvid....
man this sux... frikkin codecs - all I want is a codec that can play divx, xvid, ac3, and mpeg-3 audio... and have it NOT screw up tmpgenc
Hello,
by converting an Xvid in TMPGEnc, I become an ErrorMessage at different Percent (many times tested)
Read Error occurred at address 0009A9D9 of module 'TMPGEnc.exe' with 03276FF4.
For XviD files it is Best to use the "FFDShow decoder" Instead of the XviD codec to decode the File, so you should delete the Xvid Cidec Unless you use it for Compression and install the "FFDShow Decoder" and configure it to Decode Xvid Files, this will Probably get rid of the errors you are experienceing...
I just upgraded to the newest version of tmpgenc. I have an avi that I am converting and I am using inverse telecine for the frame rate. I have done this same file before using inverse telecine but I am trying to do it again with different aspect ratio. The problem I am having is that it will get part of the way through the telecine and then it appears to freeze up. The program is non-responsive but the hard drive light stays on. The computer doesn't freeze, just the tmpgenc. I am running Windowsx XP Pro with SP1. That is the same setup I had with the older version of tmpgenc and I had no problems before. Is anyone else experiencing this problem or know how to fix it?
I still haven't figured out this issue. It seems to do it on all of the files that I am trying to do the inverse telecine. These are files that the older version processed with inverse telecine with no trouble.
I'm using PowerVCR for TV Recording with a resolution 720x576, 2300kbps at 25fps (PAL). I've choosen these seeting to have enough picture information for TMPGEnc to do its job well converting the stream to Standard-Pal.
The problem is, that I have to cut out commercials from the recorded material. Doing this, audio and video become desync exact at this position where it has to start over after the commercial break. From this point audio is round about 1 sec ahead. The base file has 1,6GB.
I'm using the latest version of TMPGEnc on Windows 2000 SP3 / NTFS.
Well the Merge & Cut" only oficially supports Acurate editing of Mpeg files that were encoded with Tmpgenc, and it doesn"t support acurate editing of VBR Encoded Mpeg streams..If you are re-encodeing your Captured File with Tmpgenc you can try the "Cut Editing" feature in the "Source Range" setting to edit out the comercials while encodeing..And Power VCR has it"s Own mpeg Editor that I have used before and have found it Fairly good but a Little Tedius to use..This has nothing to do with your Problem But the Bitrate you are useing to Capture is Far to low to for that Resolution to Retain any sort of Acceptable Quality, if you are re-encodeing the File anyways you should capture at the Highest Bitrate Possible(10,000kbs??) so you will get the Best Possible Quality..When i capture to Mpeg2 I use WinDVR 2 (The Best in My opinion) and I capture at 14,600kbs which is as High as it goes and the Quality Is Very good, then I encode to SVCD resolutions and Bitrate after and I get Pretty good Quality...Just a Sugestion...
I converted a an AVI file, and the video, while not as great in quality, is good enough. However, this is a film for school, and the resulting audio is not acceptable. Is there any way I can have TMPEG convert the AVI file, while staying as close to the quality in audio as possible? It really doesn't matter if it takes longer to convert, it will be worth it. Thanks for any help.
Well Yes, You can Install an external Audio Encoder engine into Tmpgenc Pluss if you are Doing any Sample Rate conversion with the audio in Tmpgenc which you Probably are there is a setting to increase the Quality..Go to "Options" to "enviromental Settings" to "Audio Engine" and Under the "Sample Frequency Converter" Choose "High Quality", you can also install a Seperate audio encoder here also, the Best ones that are supported By Tmpgenc are "Toolame" and "SCMPX" you can Find them on Google and you install them By clicking the Browse Button under"Mpeg 1 Layer 2" and navigateing to the Encoder you downloaded, SCMPX can also be used as a Sample Rate Converter and you install it the same way under "Sample Frequemcy Converter"...Useing a Higher Bitrate will also give better audio Quality, if you still do not like the audio Quality after trying there methods you can allways use a Totally seperate Program to encode the audio....
You should take a look at the framerate of Your movie. Sometime the one who encoded it anly did it for PC usage, so they differ from the standard fps of 23,xxx or 29,xxx for NTSC or 25 fpr PAL. I had the same problem where the movie was encoded at 20fps... GSpot will show you. I have to parse the miss-encoded avi through AviSynth to get the fps corrected and then let TMPGEnc do the mpg conversion.
Programm seems to be very raw. And for sure not for $68. User interfase is "minimalistic", no multiple audio streams support, menu templates are agly and user are not allowed to change them or even disable "chapter" submenu, it's not possible to make an iso image. After all, there is no VCD/SVCD support, which seems to be a "standard" feature.
One thing is good: partial AC3 support (haven't try it yet).
Sorry, but current version can be called only "DVD authoring plug-in for TMPGEnc+" and sold for $19.99, and only after adding VCD/SVCD support to it and fixing menu builder. Are you going to make a "real" program in closest feature?
Is there anyway to boost the RAM usage in TMPG for faster encodes like CCE ?
TMPG has better results then anything else but it doesnt use much ram.
I have a gig of ram and Dual cpu and TMPG uses full cpu usage and I still have half of my ram left while encoding on high priority.
CCE uses full cpu and leaves me with 50 megs of ram on high priority and encodes much faster.I dont like CCE or any other enocders on the market.
Can TMPG utilize my system to the fullest and eat up my ram?
NO, There is No way to make it suck up more ram, If it needed the Ram it would use it, I believe that only the very newest versions of CCE have the Encodeing Priority setting.Tmpgenc and CCE are Written on 2 totally different Platforms, Tmpgenc is written in the Old Delfi code were CCE was written Useing Visual C+ and C+ is a Much More highly Optimized Code that the Old Delphi Code, they Could Write Tmpgenc Useing C+ but that would take rewriteing the Code from Scratch for the Most part and would take a Lot of developement and they would have to start dealing with a Whole new Batch of bugs to work out, but it would greatly increase the Encodeing spead of Tmpgenc...I don"t know why you don"t like CCE as for Mpeg2 encodeing it is well Known that it is Far superior to Tmpgenc, It"s Mpeg 1 encodeing is Not very good at all but they only added the Mpeg1 encodeing to CCE as an After thought, and the Developers didn"t even test the Mpeg1 support in CCE when they First realeased it so they didn"t even know if it would comply with Mpeg1 standards..I find CCE easy to use Fast and of Superior Quality, and it doesn"t Have any of Bugs that Tmpgenc has..So CCE doesn"t have any Good Filters or a Resize filter or any real Extra Features at all But even when I use Tmpgenc I do not use it"s Filters or It"s Extra Features Cuz AVISynth Filters are Far superior..But Hey To Each his Own...Cheers
I agree with Minion. You can't compare TMPG and CCE because of the way they use resources.
Just like minion says CCE is a $2000 optimized program written in totally different code to TMPG and thus use resources differently.
You can't force a program to use more ram, but what you can do is stop your system from using virtual memory which does slow things down. Seeing as you have so much ram you shouldn't need any Virtual memory at all.
Go into your virtual memory settings and disable it this should make sure your ram is used to it's full potential.
As for your dislike of CCE compared to TMPG, you are in a very small minority here. There could be a few reasons for this. Maybe you are only using CCE for MPEG1 encoding for which CCE is no good at all. CCE is designed as a commercial MPEG2 encoder. Maybe you don't like the interface, but there are ways you can use the benefits of TMPG's interface yet get the high quality and speed of CCE.
If you really are using TMPG for MPEG2 (and there is absolutely nothing wrong with TMPG's MPEG2 encoding) because you think it's better than CCE then I can only say this must be due to the fact you don't really know how to get the best from CCE.
Once you have learned how to use CCE properly you WILL see the difference in quality.