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My computer completely shuts down while trying to encode an avi to m2v and wav files. I have three sticks of ram, and tried each one separately and I still have the same problem with each stick of ram. I'm using Tmpgenc 2.510. PC specs:
Asus A7N8X MB
Athlon xp 2100+
1G PC 2100 DDR Ram (1x512 2x256)
Auidigy 2 Platinum
ATI AIW 8500DV
WD 60G HD Primary Master
WD 200G HD Primary Slave
DVD Rom drive Seconday Master
Sony DVD+/- R/RW Drive Secondary Slave
Most Crashes In tmpgenc are Due to the Source file and/or codec conflicts as opposed to Tmpgenc, if you got the File from Downloading it off the Net then that Might be the Problem...Have you tried to frameserve the File to Tmpgenc???
The file is an avi I captured using virtual dub and huffyuv. I've done many of these types of files before although this is the first time I've tried to do this on my new motherboard.
I upgraded my bios and only use one stick 512m of memory.
I had ddr333 pc2700 and could not use all three sticks.
It would crash or give an error dump , worked fine on my old motherboard.
It seems like some of the newer motherboards are picky on the memory
brand and combinations and if the memory is unregistered above 256m.
I converted a divx avi file to SVCD. The actual runtime is 1:09:27, but TMPGEnc report 190min00sec. Even so, the encoding progress goes on normal.
The same problem encounted in version 2.59.47.155 and 2.510.157.
I am a newbie to this, but heard it was a fantastic program. I have two AVI files that I am trying to make into a (S)VCD. When I load the first file (First half of movie), it says it is not supported, but the second part (second half of movie) works just fine. Is there something that I can try to see why it's not going to work?
Hi there, I converted an AVI file to mpeg1 so I can make a vcd. I used TMPGEnc 2.5 .I burn the vcd using vcdeasy 1.1.4 and it looks fine in my computer. When I try to play trhe vcd on my DVD player which supports VCD/SVCD/CDR-RW/MP3 the video stops and the audio goes on and sometimes it skips and goes on to the next frame. Can anyone tell me why?
Thanks
Do you Mean that the Video stops or slows down then speeds up again a second later and Catches up with the Audio???? If this is so then the Problem probably has to do with Bitrate spikes or the Bitrate being to High, If you are Useing VBR then try seeing if CBR helps or Lowering the Bitrate..And Make sure you Didn"t encode the AVI to a Plain Mpeg 1 file, The File has to Be encoded to a Mpeg1/VCD file which is Different than a Plain Mpeg1 file...
I am wondering if there's a formula I can use to predict my SVCD output size when using the Inverse Telecine option. The wizard works great for output size when the constant bitrate is 1600Kbps or over. But when I have to use a lower bitrate I don't know how big the output filesize is going to be.
You either need a good bitrate calculator or you can load the the SVCD template from the main window then load the 'Unlock.mcf' template.
Next save the template in the template folder.
When you run the wizard again you should see this template and you should be able to adjust the bitrate to whatever you wish.
I have this DIVX movie that I want to put on a disc and watch on my DVD player. Is it possible ? My player supports DVD-R VCD MP3 etc. Hope it's not too dumb a question, thsi is all new to me.
Not a dumb question because even doing the most mundane tasks with video requires complex analysis and planning.
First thing to consider is that Divx is usually encoded with much more loss than the Mpeg2 used for commercial DVDs. Depending on the bitrate, encoding quality, and TV size, the result might look worse than VHS tape. Starting with a higher quality source would make more sense.
Next thing to consider is that getting anything on a DVD requires an up front learning curve, and then a fair amount of work. If it is just one movie and your time is worth anything, go buy the DVD!
After that are technical issues which need to be addressed as they arise.
I originally started with converting Divx/Xvid files to SVCD and am now going to DVD. As wcpaul said there can be alot of loss when encoding to an Avi. However there are some that do quite a nice job out there. A basic rule of thumb I use is 600mb/hour in the Avi. Also check the resoulution DVD's are 720x480 and I have found Avis with that res. The first hurdle to over come is getting your computer setup so Tmpgenc can process both the Video and Audio of the Avi by itself. Next I have a modified DVD template that produces separare video and Audio files during encoding. This gives better quality in the end. Then I load them into Dazzle which is a DVD authoring software that converts the files to VOBs and creates the IFO and BUF files for the movie and either burns them directly to disk or creates a disk image. If the resulting file is larger than one disk, which can easily happen. I then run DVD2One on the files created by Dazzle to fit it on a single 4.7gb disk. One side note Dazzles default is PAL and if you don't change before you start a project than you will get errors stating non-dvd compliant video if you are trying to build a NTSC disk. I recently built a DVD from a Dirty Harry Divx. The movie was 1h 45m long. The processing time in Tmpgenc was 22 hours and another hour for Dazzle to build the files and burn the disk. The resulting file size was 3.6 gb. I have a celeron 1.2Ghz computer. So yes this can be a long process,
RICK.....It shouldn"t be takeing you 22 hours to encode a 1 hour 45 minute Movie on a 1.3ghz CPU, it shouldn"t take More than 6-8 hours on your Computer, I have a 1.7ghz and it only takes about 4 hours, and with CCE it takes less than 2 hours...
RICK.....It shouldn"t be takeing you 22 hours to encode a 1 hour 45 minute Movie on a 1.3ghz CPU, it shouldn"t take More than 6-8 hours on your Computer, I have a 1.7ghz and it only takes about 4 hours, and with CCE it takes less than 2 hours...So there Might be something wierd going on with your system....
When I'm encoding to a SVCD it seems pretty much in line. My freind has a P4 1.6 overclocked to 2.2 and his is almost twice as fast as mine on SVCDs. I am doing a 2 pass encoding on the DVDs which takes twice as long but does give smaller file size. I did think that something was wrong and rebuilt the hard drive just 2 weeks ago. I encoded Master of disguise today from Divx to Svcd and it took a little over 6 hours and that is 1:20 min long. But if you have any ideas on how to improve the speed I'd like to hear them. Faster computer is on my wish list but can't justify it right now.
If you want speed then why use 2pass to save little space. CQ is usually better and wont usually dramatically increase the file size either.
You don't say what Motion search you are using. If you are using 'Highest quality' then forget it. This is absolutely pointless. High quality will be almost twice as fast and give exactly the same results.
Also if the audio in your AVI is ac3 then there is no need to encode the audio at all. Using the right DVD authoring program you should be able to import this diectly into it.
Now depending on your views why not o/clock that PC like your friend. Celerons are seriously overclockable. Just don't clock to much and if your BIOS allows ot don't overclock the memory to much. In fact depending on how much you O/clock your CPU you may have to downclock your memory back to a reasonable frequency.
I would also like to point out that your friends PC is probably too overclocked. 2.2 for a P4 1.6 will probably make the PC run slower with some tasks than if it was just clocked to 1.9 because of the strain imposed on the other components such as the memory and the graphics card and is probably cooking his CPU. I would guess your friend probably has a lot of unexplained errors and lockups on his system. If he bench tested it with something like SISoft sandra he would probably see his memory running with a lower score than if the CPU was clocked to 1.9.
This is just my opinion built from experience with such matters, so it's yours and your friends choice.
Ashy, I have tried to overclock my hardware as I've done in the past but no luck. I only spent a couple of days so maybe I should reinvestigate. Right now the speed isn't an issue for me but once my Riteks get here that will probably change. I am using high quality setting as you suggested. Everything I watch is on a 47" widescreen so quality does help and I'm still in the testing phase to see what I like. 2 pass saved about 200 meg over constant quality 100 setting. Is this like the motion search where lower will give similar results? I did try a couple of authoring softwares that was supposed to be able to convert from Avi directly to DVD. They both failed for the same reason. When converting they don't retain the aspect ratio so the end result is distorted.
I have this DIVX movie that I want to put on a disc and watch on my DVD player. Is it possible ? My player supports DVD-R VCD MP3 etc. Hope it's not too dumb a question, thsi is all new to me.
Yes you Can Convert the DivX file to Mpeg1/VCD and Burn it to 2 CD-R"s and Play it on your DVD Player as a VCD..Just load the DivX file into Tmpgenc and Follow the Instructions in the "Wizard", or you Can turn the Wizard off and Just load in the DivX file and Click the "Load" button and Navigate to the Templates folder and Choose the VCD Template and encode it..But you Might have a Problem with the audio....
I am running into issues converting MOV to MPG. Using TMPGEnc and the QT plug in, I can convert the video, but all my converted MPGs end up with silent audio. I have QuickTime 6 installed. Could this be a problem?
This Problem has Come up before with Mov Files, If you can try to Extract the audio from the Mov Files to WAV format if you can and use that as the audio source, I believe "Sound Forge" can extract the audio from MOV files ...
How come on the japenese side of tmpgenc there is a dvd authoring program to download but not on the english side of this website. How much does it costs and is it good. I can't read japenese.