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I need a little help with authoring my first family movies with TMPGEnc Autoring Works 4. I created some mpg-files and wanted to bring them on DVD. Everything works just fine, the only problem is, that only 40-50 minutes fit on one DVD which seems much too little for me. The files are standard resolution 720x576 PAL, so it should be possible to bring 2 hours of film onto one single DVD or not? It is possible to make it fit on one 4,7 disc, but I think it implicates quality loss this way. Do you have any ideas?
It would be great if you had any suggestion, thank you in advance!
StarFishes
I'll take a stab at some suggestions for you, bearing in mind I have version 3, not 4.
In version 3, you can assign defaults for all new projects and override those settings on a case-by-case basis. The defaults are found under Options.Preferences.
Take a look at your audio settings. Did you record the Berlin Philharmonic, or did you record your children playing soccer? Do you need super, high quality sound? Now, I'm an audiophile and I can hear the difference if I'm listening on good headphones, but for everyday stuff over external speakers, I find a sampling rate of 48000Hz, 16 bits and 192 Kb/s bitrate is just fine for spoken sound, and 96000Hz for music. My point here is, the higher quality you use, the more space on the disc it takes to record it. Back off on the audio settings if you don't have movies that demand impeccable sound.
Are your menus animated? That is, do you have thumbnails to select scenes and those thumbnails themselves are small, short, movie clips? Try making single-frame thumbnails.
Besides the excellent suggestions by Richard, your only other choices are lowering the video bitrate (which it sounds like you don't want to do) or use a dual layer DVD.
thank you for your suggestions! I did some experiments in changing the video and audio bitrate which has been very high set by my video capture card. I found out that a constant video bitrate of 4000 seems to be acceptable, the audio I set to 168 and now everything works just fine.
The only question I have now is what the application does with the setting Fit on DVD 4.7. It doesn't ask me anything about compression.
I'm using a Sony Vaio Z Laptop with a GeForce 9300M GS running XP doing a lot of video editing work with TMPGEnc 4.0 XPress. I bought this machine because of its small size and because its takes advantage of the GeForce 9300M GS and CUDA Technology for faster renders.
However, the latest version of TMPGEnc 4.0 XPress shows a grayed out area on the Preferences tab under options when i try to activate CUDA.
I confirmed with Nvidia that for sure the GeForce 9300M GS supports CUDA and I tried both Sony official Nvidia drivers for the Z (which include the CUDA.dll files) and also the latest Official Nvidia Drivers with CUDA support.
No luck with any drivers. I was under the assumption only the GeForce8800 GTX/GTS video card using the G80 core were not supported! :( As a $100 piece of software with basically no support, Im extremelly upset.
I have just finished my first dvd and used some pans with the videocamera, but they appear pretty bad on the dvd. They are uneven and that don´t look good. What can I do to solve the problem?
When I convert DVD-Video to MPEG-4 AVC format (Main profile, Level 4, 720x480, Display 16:9, 29.97fps, 2-pass CBR, 4500 kbps, motion search 256, NTSC), the video has a bit of stuttering (the original is fine and smooth with no stuttering at all). It is quite small, but definitely present, especially when the camera pans. The resulting video actually hurts my eyes and gives me a headache over a period of time!
Wondering if I can tweak any conversion setting to make the video stutter-free, or reduce it significantly?!
Try again but this time shut off antivirus and firewall, disconnect from Internet to be safe, and check your processes for any antispyware programs that may interfere with the transcoding. I stop processes like Windows Update checker, Java, and some HP stuff for my scanner.
Another thing, it helps if you don't use your computer when it's converting.
I encoded 720x480p MP4 files and it works in my psp2000,but I found two problem,
first,the source file is 25 fps,then change to 23.976fps,when it done,it is pausal when playing,when i change fps 25 or higher,then it's perfect.
the second,the sound part is aac 192k,but it display 128k in my psp,I try to change
160k or 92k,but it's still display 128k,i play on my computer it display the ture number.why?
I guess the psp can't handle 720x480p video with a framerate lower than 25 fps? I'm not completely familiar with the limitations of 480p video on the psp, but if you found that 25 fps or higher works, then you should use those settings.
As for the AAC 192k issue, I'd be inclined to believe the computer over the psp. Maybe the psp has problems reading the header file and obtaining the correct file data.
A psp forum might be a better place to get answers for these questions.
Well, I do identical encodes on a daily basis so my encoding settings are finely tuned. This would be very valuable doing a large amount of encoding; I.E. I have 400 GBs to encode on a 500 GB hard drive.
You can also use the DivX HDTV profile which lets you go up to 1280 x 720 resolution. However, I'm not sure if DivX Ultra DVD players will be able to play this at full resolution. Should play fine with DivX Player software on a computer though.
To change profile (or use no profile), in the Source stage, click on the Settings button in the track list. A track settings window should appear.
Click on the Video tab and select "Re-encode all videos as below" for the Encoder mode.
You can then change the Profile & level option to "HDTV profile" or "None" which will allow you to increase the output resolution.
If you do as suggested and change to Re-encode all videos as below and select the HDTV profile the program still only allows a maximum resolution of 1280x720 which is not the full Divx potential of 1920x1080. TmpGenc Express is the only program of theirs I have found which will let you select 1920x1080 divx. I am disappointed that TMPGEnc doesn't allow full resolution Divx to be encoded in this software.
As "myself" said, you can choose "None" for profile which WILL allow you to encode at a full 1920x1080 resolution. If I recall correctly, 4.0 XPress operates in the same manner.
In the format stage, select "MPEG-4 file output", and select "MPEG-4 AVC format" as the stream type. Click the "Select" button to proceed to the next step.
720x480 video is overkill for the PSP as there are only 480 pixels on the horizontal and 272 pixels on the vertical of the PSP's screen. Any video that has a resolution greater than 480x272 WILL NOT WORK on your PSP.
Therefore, if you are transcoding widescreen video, I suggest you set the resolution to 480x272, and if you are transcoding 4:3 video I suggest you set the resolution to 368x272. In both instances you want AT LEAST 384kbps bitrate, if not 512kbps for movies where quality is of greater importance.
These are the settings I use for Widescreen video and square video respectively:
My updated 4:3 and 16:9 settins for PSP, based on 1 pass Quantization. MUCH better quality than my last uploaded settings and SMALLER file size. Quantization ftw.
I just installed MPEG Editor 3 and am having trouble inserting transitions between key frames. I can find no way to make the insertion and the user manual is very vague about it. Is it possible that there is something wrong with the program?
Transitions can only be applied between clips, so to insert a transition into one clip, you'll have to first divide the clip into two clips.
See the post below about clip splitting for instructions.
Once you have two clips, go back the Source stage's main window and click on the "Transition editor" button on the right side of the window. This opens the transition editor window.
Here, you can select your transition and press "OK" to apply it. Back in the Source stage, an orange arrow with "TR" in it shows that you have applied a transition effect.
Once you're happy with your transitions, you can go to the Format stage. Here, make sure that "Single file output" is selected as the Output mode.
Now it will be outputted as a single file with all of your transition effects applied.
MPEG2 streams recorded using Sony PlayTV on the PS3 are in a M2TS format. When I try to import these into DVD Author 3 or TMPGEnc 4 XPress, both applications will freeze. Would adding support for this format be added in future? Right now, I have to use an extra tool to convert the file to an MPEG2 file that can be used.
It's just some text that shows up under the progress bar when you're outputting. You must have CUDA enabled to see it.
Also, just because it is using the GPU, it doesn't necessarily mean that it will be faster. In fact, I think you should turn off CUDA if you are not applying video filters.