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Pegasys Products BBS [ Sorted by thread creation date ]
After scouring this board for clues to help with my problem, it would appear that I am not the only person having trouble with this. I have been trying to use TMPGEnc 2.5 to convert a .avi to a .mpg in order to create a VCD. But no matter what I do, I always get the same result- a .mpg file which, when you run in any standard mpg media player, plays the sound but displays no video.
The particular .avi I've been trying to encode is NTSC (29 f/s). At first, I used the appropriate template and adjusted the source settings accordingly, but to no avail. So I've tried every other template (adjusting the source settings accordingly each time) and I still get the same result.
I have been told that this problem may be due to the fact that I am using Windows XP. Does anyone know if this is true?
If anyone can give me any help with this problem it would be very much appreciated, because I am at my wit's end!!
I'm using Windows XP, and I was having a similar problem. I also noticed that in TMPGEnc that while adjusting the source range that the audio track looked good but the video wouldn't show. I got out of TMPGEnc and reinstalled DivX codecs 3.11, 4.12, and 5, and now everything works great!
My advice to you would be to use Virtual dub to frameserve the file to TMPG.
If you need instructions on how to do this the I suggest you look around on this board go here: http://www.vcdhelp.com/virtualdubframeserve.htm
After scouring this board for clues to help with my problem, it would appear that I am not the only person having trouble with this. I have been trying to use TMPGEnc 2.5 to convert a .avi to a .mpg in order to create a VCD. But no matter what I do, I always get the same result- a .mpg file which, when you run in any standard mpg media player, plays the sound but displays no video.
The particular .avi I've been trying to encode is NTSC (29 f/s). At first, I used the appropriate template and adjusted the source settings accordingly, but to no avail. So I've tried every other template (adjusting the source settings accordingly each time) and I still get the same result.
I have been told that this problem may be due to the fact that I am using Windows XP. Does anyone know if this is true?
If anyone can give me any help with this problem it would be very much appreciated, because I am at my wit's end!!
I had the same problem. I was trying to go from DivX AVI to MPEG. It didn't work with the DivX 5 codec so I "downgraded" to the 3.11 codec and it worked. Maybe there are some problems with DivX 5 and TMPGEnc. If indeed you are working with DivX format you might want to try downgrading the codec.
I had actually done as you suggested earlier in the week.
Now I have a new problem. If I take an avi file from pinnacle/adobe, tmpgenc will only read it to frame 8459. I have tried it with several files with the same result. Isn't that odd? It will only allow me to have roughly 4:42 of video. I must need to use different environment variables. Have you found a combination that works satisfactorily?
I am trying to archive old analog home video to DVD. I am not as concerned about compression as I am about quality; if I only get an hour of video on one disc, it is not a big deal.
Any suggestions or resources that you can point me to would be appreciated.
I tried to find out about the vfapi plug in that is on the download page. I see people getting flamed for asking about it. I just read the FAQ several times and don't see VFAPI Plugin mentioned anywhere. Go ahead and flame away but tell me what it is and how do I know if I need it. Does every one install it or is it a fix for something?
Had this problem earlier. Looks to be a conflict with Pinnacle OpenDML HW decoder.
If you have Pinnacle system DV500Plus then upgrade to 3.0!
Disabling OpenDML in TEMPGenc Environmental settings VFAPI-Plugin is another workaround. The HW decoder is faster than the VFAPI if it works on your .avi files.
I have downloaded and installed the Nimo codec. I tried creating an mpg file from an m2v file that had sound embedded in it, and it did not work. Afterwards, I copied the MPEG2DEC.dll and SimpleResize.dll files from the Nimo Mpeg2dec directory into the TMPGEnc directory, and still no success in recognizing the m2v format for the audio. Can anyone offer some help? I am running Windows 98.