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Pegasys Products BBS [ Sorted by thread creation date ]
When using mpeg tools, merge and cut. Im trying to split a file into two. When I try to do this I always get the message 'Illegal MPEG video stream'.
What am I doing wrong??
I take it you get the video stream error when burning in nero?? ... me too... some1 once told me TMPGE is better for decoding, not cut and join... regardless... ignore them stupid errors in nero and if you not sure... burn it to your HD (virtual burn) and play the iso to see how it looks ... NO DIFFERENCE!!
I have been anxiously watching this BBS and the homepage for the release of V 3.0. Minion & Ashy.... do you have any news for us? I REALLY want to buy TMPGenc, but I cannot afford $100 for this little hobby, this year. Been stung too many times over the years by new versions of software being released right after my purchase.
I have $49 ready to send to the company, for a GREAT product, but I am waiting for the new version. Right now, I am just saving any great movies that I want to encode to SVCD to CD's (to view on the laptop or the desktop,) but will relish getting them onto CD's that I can enjoy on the DVD players on the TV's in my house.
You know, why don't they just make it $49 for one year of whatever updates come out, instead of doing it the old fashioned "version" vs. "update" approach? That is soooo yesterday!
I don't know what the chronology here has been.... like how long the users of version 1.XX had before version 2.0 was released, but it looks as if 2.0 was released a little over a year ago.
The approach TMPGenc is taking right now is a little too Microsoft-y for me right now. Of course, even Bill Gates made announcements to let us estimate when the next totally new version was going to be released, so that we could plan accordingly.
And Microsoft gave those of us who are in the computer user groups a chance to have the software for free, or at a discount, if we talked up the products to our friends, and/or helped host launch their events, and/or invited them to our meetings.
By the way, I can almost guarantee that the San Francisco Computer User Group would love to see a demonstration of what this software can do, if TMPGenc has any associates in Northern CA. We have had far less amazing demonstrations at our monthly meetings... TMPGenc IS an amazing product, when all is said and done.
When trying to create an MPEG from both an AVI and from a WAV file, TMPG gives the error "Illegal MPEG audio stream".
I am importing into TMPG an audio file (an uncompressed WAV file created from the original AVI file using Virtual Dub) and an AVI file. The reason why I stripped out the audio from the AVI, is because TMPG originally gave me the additional error "Virtual Dub has detected an improper VBR audio encoding ...", and then would record no audio. I read somewhere that stripping out the audio to a WAV file, and them recombining would solve the no audio problem (and it appears to have worked, as I have audio in the part of the AVI to MPEG conversion that was successful).
Thinking this "Illegal MPEG audio stream" problem could have been a CPU load at the time when I created the WAV file (even though I was not touching the PC), I tried stripping out the audio a second time (from the AVI file), and then recreating the MPEG from the combined AVI/WAV file a second time. When recombining/converting AVI/WAV to MPEG a second time, the problem occured again, at precisely the same place in the AVI to MPEG conversion.
My TMPG audio settings are MPEG Audio Layer-1, 48000 Hz sampling frequency, Stereo channel mode, Bit rate=192, Error protection selected.
My TMPG video settings are MPEG-1 Video, 640x352 pixels, 1:1 (VGA) aspect ratio, 23.976 fps, Constant bitrate (CBR) for rate control mode, bitrate 1150 kbits/second, and Motin search precison = Normal.
Please, are there any suggestions as to the best way to approach this in terms of TMPG settings, or in terms of chopping the MPEG into pieces where the error occurs, and then try to recombine? Both the AVI file and uncompressed WAV files are big (600+ MBytes) and the error occurs 92% into the new MPEG file.
What you can try to do is not encode the audio in Tmpgenc at all..Just encode the Video(set the stream type to "Video only)this will give you a mpeg video file then use something like "Headac3e" or even "DB Power amp" to encode the audio to MP2" then use the "Mpeg tools" "simple Multiplex" to join the Mpeg video and the "Mp2 audio into a Mpeg file..and if you are going to make a VCD then you need to change a Whole bunch of your settings cuz useing those settings just won"t play on a DVD Player...For VCD you need the Resolution to be set to "352+240"(NTSC)for VCD compliance, and you need the Frequency of the Audio to be set to "44100HZ" not 48000HZ, of it will not play on a DVD/VCD player...
Thankyou for your suggestions. Very helpful for a beginner like myself.
Prior to reading your post, I managed to succeed with an AVI to MPEG conversion by installing "TooLame" encoder as a "plugin" to TMPG, and I switched the TMPG audio output to "MPEG-1 Audio-Layer-2" (to access the plugin). However, as you point out, my settings are incorrect for a VCD. From reading your post I now understand that if I want to create a VCD, I will need to redo the AVI to MPEG conversion, to 44100 Hz audio and Resolution 252+240(NTSC). Hopefully having succeeded with this step, that step (with different settings) will work also.
I used Pinnacle Studio software to convert my DV tape to avi. It created 5 avi files. Tmpgenc seems to allow me to specify only 1 file as the source. How do I tell Tmpgenc that I need to convert all 5 avi files and merge them into a single mpg file?
I am capturing my video from a digital camera onto my 80gig baracuda IDE Harddrive, when I try and encode it using TMPG, I get Horizontal lines in the film, but only when there is fast movement of people or the camera.
Does anyone know the data rate needed to capture video onto the hard drive and encode to DVD.
Your drive should be plenty fast enough for capturing even at full resolution. The Baracuda's are pretty fast drives and as such you shouldn't have problems capturing with one.
Your horizontal lines are called interlace lines. You need to use the de-interlace filter under the advanced tab in settings.
The deinterlace option you want will be either Odd field or Even field.
As a tip the next time you capture. Use a codec which allows you to capture to progressive frames this will solve your interlacing problem.
Usually lowering the maximum bitrate by 500-1000 kb/s and reducing the Q level by 5% is enough to reduce the file size by 10-20%.
Reducing the Q level by 5% will roughly give you a 100 mb decrease in size.
Also it may not be necessary to reduce the quality of the Video to fit the Movie on to disk.
It is possible to reduce the audio bitrate to 128 kb/s and still mantain a decent sound quality. This will reduce the overall size. Another point to remember is that you can overburn most 80min disks by 20 mb. This will give you an extra 40mb to play with. Add this to the reduction in size of the audio part and you may be able to fit it on the disks without adjusting the Video bitrate.
Does anyone out there know if there are any programs that will convert the S-Video format that I recieve from my CamCorder to MPEG format so that I can make some valid VCD's or SVCD's.
I don"t really understand by S-Video format, From what I understand "S-Video" isn"t a format but the mane of the type of port or connection from your Cam-Corder to whatever you used to transfer it to your computer..Like My dvd Player and my VCR have "S-Video" outputs..What program are you useing to Transfer your Cam-Corder movies to your Computer???Are you useing a "Analog" Capture card or a "Digital" Firewire Port??I would be more than Happy to help you but I need more information on your set-up and what you wan"t done..
I've ripped the Swordfish DVD using "DVD Decrypter". Then used "DVD2AVI" to create a .d2v file and audio file. For some reason every time I encode the first half of the movie to an MPEG the audio is like 10 seconds before the video. Other movies I've encoded with no problems. Why is it doing this?
This sounds like in the original DVD the sound had a delay given to it that you did not notice when you got the outputs from DVD2AVI. What I would suggest is to take the AVI and put it into VirtualDub and then take the Wav which, if you got an AC3 from DVD2AVI you can get from BSWEET, and add that wav to the VirutalDub also. Then play with the Delay factor until everything comes out correctly. Save it and redo it into Tmpgenc.
If there is a "Audio Delay" it will have the delay value in the name of the audio file..You should only get a Delay if you are ripping the audio to the wrong format, you have to rip it to "WAV" format with the "Dolby Surround downmix"..And if after all this there still seems to be a delay then there is an easy fix you just de-mux the Mpeg file and re-Mux it with "Mpeg2VCR" it has a feature in it"s multiplexor than will allow you to adjust for audio delay when joining the audio and video streams...
I was wondering if someone could give me a little help with this problem.
I have a VOB file that was converted to AVI and the audio extracted as a WAV file. I am using TMPG encoder to convert them back to a MPEG2 so I can burn it as a DVD. I edited the AVI file and need to make the WAV file match the AVI file. Is there any way to preview the file in TMPG encoder before you actually encode it? ANY help is very appreciated and thanks so much for your time.
Matt
I used DVDTOAVI to convert the VOB file to a AVI file and it seperates the Audio from the video. I looked but did not find a option to keep them together when converting them. Is there another program that is better out there?
thanks so much for the info
Matt
i'm no expert on dvd...maybe others can help...all i can sugest is to use dvd2avi to demux the vob file and then encode to mpg using tmpgenc rather than avi and do the editing on the mpg...if thats posible...what kind of editing are u doing? just cuting? or filters? or..
The way you use DVD2AVI to make a Mpeg1/2 file is NOT to make an avi file..What you do is go to "Save Project" and save a D2V project file and a Wav audio file then you load the D2V file into tmpgenc as the Video and the wav as the audio then encode to mpeg1/2....Doing it this way is a lot easier than makeing an AVI file and faster and the quality is much better...
I installed the last version of TEMPGEnc. and tried to encode two different movies to burn without succes for either of them for the same reason.
When i start the process the program estimate it will take about 14 hours for a 1h25 movie
But that's not the problem, after 4 hours and a half the preview and source position show it reached the end of the movie but only +/- 30% of the process seems to be done if you believe the progression bar.
i then have a error message saying:
Read error occured at adress 00401CB8 of module 'TEMPGEnc.exe' with FFFFFFFF
The resulting file seems to be the correct size but is not working.
I'm using downloaded templates but they worked before with the previous version of the program.
>If it is an DivX-Movie, you should use VirtualDub as a Frameserver.
Thank you for taking time to answer.
I tried this and apparently it's a conspiration!
TMPGEnc now refuse to open the .vdr file saying the format is not supported.
i'm new at working with these can you tell? ;)
To frameserve from Virtualdub you need to install the Virtualdub frame serving client first.
Look in the Virtualdub help file for info how to do this or go to VCDhelp.com.
Before that though try raising your Directshow multimedia file reader to 2 under the VFAPI plugins tab in TMPG, Option>enviromental setting.
Well that should get your file into DVDit, all you need is to have the "interval of sequence header" set to "1" and have a closed GOP, have you tried DE-Multiplexing the mpeg file and loading the audio and video seperately??For some reason doing that seems to stop than error...
I am capturing my video from a digital camera onto my 80gig baracuda IDE Harddrive, when I try and encode it using TMPG, I get Horizontal lines in the film, but only when there is fast movement of people or the camera.
Does anyone know the data rate needed to capture video onto the hard drive and encode to DVD.
What you see is interlaced Video. This has nothing to do with your Harddisc. It's the way, Camcorders are working.
You have two choices: Leave it interlaced, but that needs high Bitrates.
Deinterlace it, but then you will loose sharpness and smooth Moving.
Your best bet is to use the "De-interlace filter" in the "Advanced Settings" and choose the filter that get"s rid of the lines best with the least amount of blurring, and be sure to have the field order set correctly, because this will dive you a sort of jumpy look in high motion scenes..If you use the "Wizard" to load the file in then it will analize the file and set the field order correctly...
If he want's to encode for DVD, it is NOT the best choice to deinterlace.
Hey, we are talking about DVD! On DVD, you have enought space to use high Bitrates for a very clear and sharp interlaced Video.