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Hey guys, long time reader first time typer I am converting AVI to Mpeg using TMPG Enc then burning to disk (mpeg to VCD) using Nero >> when I play the CD on a DVD everything looks great even the sound. Exept periodically during the movie the sound get a little behing the video this may happen 2 or 3 times during a movie and only last for about 2 to 3 minutes. I know its not that big of deal but becomes very annoying after doing 76 movies this way.
Basically my Audio and Video are not running at the same time I really notice it when they talk there mouth is moving and the sound is about 3-4 seconds behind......... Please Help.
I just started encoding and am experiencing the same problem but a lot more frequently.. After about 3 minutes the sound and video is out of sync and the they seem to correct. This process repeats itself throughout the entire video. I haven't found an answer yet but I agree it is very annoying.
I am encoding with seperate AVI and WAV source files..
While encoding in CQ mode, the following error is displayed: "Write Error occurred at Address (number) of module tmpgenc.exe with (number).
Sometimes it comes 100 minutes into a 120 minute AVI file, other times it comes 30 minutes into the AVI. It is pretty unpredictable, and needless to say, it is extremely frustrating. The AVI is a legit type-2 file which was captured on my computer, not downloaded. In CQ mode, it was able to transcode the complete AVI the first time around. I wanted to up the quality after inspecting the output M2V. The second and third time it bombed out. This is a pretty big problem. Does anyone really have a clue as to what could be causing it? Could it be a combination of the motherboard, processor, or memory being used? Could it be a bad hard disk? Does anyone else seem to have this problem. If anyone else is getting CQ mode to work without bombing,
well possible - i get that sometimes too , also in unpredictable manner and as my bard/cpu combination (Asus V7KT266 / AMD K7) is known for causing troubles everywhere, i blamed it on that. most of the time just restart helps - or smallest changes in the source such as dropping the one frame that crashed it :)
I have tried to use this software for quite some time now but I still can't get it to work right. I want to simply convert an avi file to mpeg. I have however gotten sound now but with no video. Any suggetions would be appreciated.
You probably need to raise the "Direct Show File Reader" you do this by going to "Options" to "Enviromental Settings" to "Vfapi Plugins" and raise the "direct show file reader" to "2"........
I made a SVCD(PAL) from the movie "Animal" with the tools Smartripper,DVD2AVI and TMPGenc. After encoding I recognized that the .mpg file is "noisy" in the sound...I don't know how to describe it...but the .wav file that DVD2AVI created is okay. After ecoding there's something like a "shhhhhh" in the background of the sound. What's the reason fot that ? Does anybody have the same problem ? Solutions ? Perhaps the IDE-cables are "disturbed" by an electromagentic field of other hardware components ? Please help !
The source file most probably had a different sample rate than the MPEG you have encoded to. TMPG's samplerate converter isn't too good. You can download a good alternative called SCMPX which you can use as an external encoder with TMPG. You can find this under 'Options'
The other alternative is to load the source file into Virtual dub then extract the audio to a wav. Click 'audio' and change the samplerate to 44.1 khz and make sure you tick the high quality box then laod this as the audio only into TMPG and encode. You will end up with an Mp2 file. Multiplex this with your already encoded movie using the MPEGtools.
"The source file most probably had a different sample rate than the MPEG you have encoded to."
I used DVD2AVI to extract the .wav file. Then I took the .d2v file and the .wav file to encode in TMPGenc. It worked fine until I now changed the hardware in my PC. I had a Athlon 800 MHz and a Asus A7V mainboard and now I have a P4 1,6 GHz running at 2,154 GHz overclocked and a Asus P4B533-E mainboard. Perhaps it's a problem with the overclocking of the P4 ???
I'm not a crack with all these tools and I thought that TMPGenc is good, easy to use an makes very good results. The problem is that DVDx 2.0 makes the same results with the "noisy" sound. And I tried 3 different movies... what now ?
It may be your overclocking, I think that is too high for your processor unless you have some sort of extra cooling I would clock it down now before you do irrepairable damage to not only your processor, but the other components on the motherboard.
I have a 1.7 ghz processor which is O/C at 1.9 ghz and has extra cooling. I have done many tests and runs stable at this speed. Any higher and the other components on the board become to stressed and begin too fail.
If you have simply O/C your FSB then your memory is probably running at too high a speed and you may find as I did that you will get less performace at such a high O/C as the memory starts to fail and may be part of your problem.
Also your graphics card will probably be seriously overclocked now unless you have some sort of utility to underclock it back down to a more reasonable level.
It may also be that one of your overclocked components which is running to high and is thus introducing this as distortion to your file.
My advice whether overclocking your processor is the problem or not is to drop the over clock to at least below 2ghz before you damage your board or components on it.
I am using the newest version of tmpgenc to convert avi into mpeg. However, when i finally start the encryption process, the "Processins inverse telecine" is still at 1% after letting the computer run one night. I wouldn't worry, except I that I hear no "computer sounds" so to speak --> the computer isnt actually doing anything. Not only that, the the program is always very slow in responding... I have to wait... oh 10 seconds before anything happens.
Trying to FrameServe to Tmpgenc with Flask MPG and AVISynth plugin. When I try to load the video.avs file in Tmpg, I get script error there is no function "IPCSource" (c:windowsdesktopvideo.avs, line 1). Am I missing a plugin, or do I need to rewrite the avs file? Help??????
Recently I've downloaded a Divx movie that plays both audio and video perfectly in Windows media player. But when I load it into TMPGenc to convert it to MPEG-1, there is neither audio nor video in the resulting MPG file.
The AVI-file does load into TMPGenc however, and I can even start the conversion, but the output MPG file is a black screen movie without audio...
The reason the video turned out blank is probably because you needed to raise the priority if the "direct Show plugin" I have noticed that with especially Divx 5 Tmpgenc will load the file but it would not show a picture.You raise the Direct Show Plugin by going by going to "options" to "Enviromental Settings" to "Vfapi plugins" and Raise the "Direct Show" to "2", and for the audio being not there that is probably because the audio is either "VBR MP3" or "AC3" and neither is supported in Tmpgenc so if it is "VBR MP3" you need to download "Virtual Dub" and use it to extract the audio to a wav file and use that as your audio source, but if it is AC3 then you will need an AC3 decoder to extract the audio to a wav file...
PS: If the video still doesn"t
then re-instell the relevant codec..
Maybe it is just this movie (.mov) but it starts converting to VCD just fine...but eventually takes forever to convert a frame. I ultimately have to kill it. The 'slowing down' happens at different parts, so it does not seem to be related to bad data...does TMPGenc search through the entire file it is writing to add the last converted frame or something? That might explain it...
Apple Quicktime .mov
30 minutes, 1.1 gig, 320 x 240, 16 bit 44khz.
Default VCD settings.
Converts fine with other codecs (but TMPGenc always has the best results!!).
A lot of people are encoding their avi-file into mpeg-2 (svcd) because they say it has a far superior quality over mpeg-1 (vcd)
Okay, i wont argue the better quality of mpeg-2
BUT ..... in my opinion if you have a avi file which has a video bitrate of ~1000, then it would be a waste to encode this into mpeg-2 (which has bitrates up to 2500)
The best quality you will be able to get, in my mind, is vcd which has a bitrate of 1150
Is this assumption correct, because it is my believe that with a lower bitrate then 1150 you NEVER will be able to get a better quality if you encode this as mpeg-2 with a higher bitrate.
If i'm wrong then i have to make a lot of apologies :)
Don"t look at avi files with Bitrates in mind look at them with Quality in mind,because you aren"t encodeing to avi and you have no controll over the quality of a file that has allready in avi format, but you do have some controll over the mpeg quality, but your mpeg will never look better than the avi you are encodeing and the higher the bitrate you use the closer the mpeg looks in quality to the original avi..A vcd will never look as good as the source you are encodeing cuz the bitrate of a standard vcd isn"t high enough to acurately duplicate the quality of the avi file and mpeg is a lossy format but you can raise the bitrate of the vcd to obtain better quality..The biggest reason that svcd"s have better quality than vcd"s isn"t really the bitrate(it sure helps) or because it is mpeg2 but the increased resolution, a svcd has over twice the resolution of a standard vcd,......
Excuse me Minion but for once I have to disagree with you. I downloaded some Star Trek movies on Kazaa. They were encoded in Divx 3 and the quality wasn't really great... in fact it was poor. I thought I could try to convert it to MPEG-2 (SVCD) and I was really impressed by what I get... quality is now much more superior than the original one... so that's for me, sorry Minion :-D...
So if i understand i right, my little explanation about the bitrates is sofar incorrect that their is NO DIRECT relationship between bitrate AVI vs bitrate mpeg (1or2)
What you are looking for is a good quality avi (in this the bitrate is of course a big factor) and with this good quality avi it will make a difference whether you convert it to mpeg-1 or mpeg-2
Another way to look at this: Once a video has artifacts like noise or pixelation, it requires higher bitrate and resolution to reproduce that noise exactly when transcoding. Defects do not compress as well as clean video.
It is counterintuitive that poor video requires more file space to archive, but that is the mathematical reality.
Filtering defects kills two birds with one stone as long as the quality is not degraded. Although slow, "smart smoother HiQuality" for Virtualdub produces results without the cartoony, "merged pixel" appearance of other smoothers.
After several bug posts, you guys put in a feature that lets the user select the MAX number of frames in a GOP. Well, I am sad to say it doesn't work at all. I have tried 5 differet DV Avi files and for all five of them when I put in output sequence header code to 1 every GOP and set the MAX GOP size to 36 it still outputs occasional GOP with as much as 40 frames in it. I am using Industry Standard Sonic Scenarist DVD creator and it is report this error with the mpeg 2 files generated by TMPGENC. Please actually FORCE THE PROGRAM to stop at 36 frames per GOP, it doesn't do this all the time!!!
I don"t know if this is actually the problem it is just a guess, but maybe if you turn off the "detect scene change" option then it might not make the gop"s longer that you specify cuz when Tmpgenc detects a scene change it will add an extra I frame, I don"t know if it just replaces a B or P frame with an I frame or actually adds an extra frame in turn makeing the gop longer, just a thought.
I don"t do DVD"s but I thought the standard number of frames in a gop for DVD"S is like between 15 and 18? If this is actually a bug in Tmpgenc and you are useing the "Plus" version then go to the "Pegassus site" and tell them about it so they can fix it cuz the makers of Tmpgenc don"t really seem to come here.......
DVD-GOPs are between 14 - 18 Frames or up to 36 FIELDS.
But in TMPGEnc you have to use the Max Number auf Frames. Set it to 16, and all's OK (and compatible).