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Hello, when trying to encode a mpg1 into a mpg2 file TMPGEnc always searches for "m2v_dec.dll". Does anybody know where to obtain this dll?
thanks,
ricky
I have a 100mhz pentium, 66 mhz bus, 32mb EDO ram, 1 mb video memory, windows 98 packard bell old junk. I am trying to convert Divx quality AVI files to VideoCD. It works but it takes a long time. Does anyone have a equation for figuring out how long it will take and how space the new file will be? Is there anyway to make the process go faster, when it's encoding it only uses like 5% of my resources and the processor light doesn't flash very often. Please tell me all the ways to rig TMPGenc so that it goes faster even if it means not using anything else and closing every application including the systray. I need all the speed I can get. Thanks.
I"m supprised it works at all on your system,"tmpgenc" is designed to use pretty much all your resourses while encodeing,so if it only uses 5% of yours it must take long,one hour of avi file takes 5 hours to encode to mpeg2 on my 800mhz system so it must take like a month on yours,The only way for it to speed up is for you to get a faster computer and more ram.but to figure out file size ,if you are useing the standard video-cd template 1150kbs this equels out to 1 minute of avi is 10mb of mpeg,so you can fit 80 min on a 80min 700mb disk........
I think you will find it was your hdd light that was occasionally flashing and your processor was going flat out at 100%. You can't speed up the whole process unless you want to loose quality.
processor light... LOL... sorry but i actually did laugh a lot... not offence though... some people are into computers and some are not... thta light is your HD activity light... and its normal not to flash too much... specially on your slow system... and i think your processor was on 100%... BTW how did you know it was usinf only 5% resources... must be sore really weird resource metter u have there m8.
Well, TMPGEnc is not thought to be fast, but to have high quality output... so just use anyother program to do it if you want to be fast... but the fastest setings in TMPGEnc are the realtime something... if it says real time then its fast... try the constant quality...
More i cant say... unless... buy a new comp... i have my baby fomr 9 month now... and she's already way too old (yes i'm talking about my computer) and even though she's 9 months already she's a 1200 athlon with 512 ddr pc2100 ram... HD are all 7200... and still tmpeg takes me way too long to encode... but i'm really happy with the necoding quality... I really HATE MS DV codec... makes me script a hole shit of stuff to fix the probs and takes wayyyyyyyylong to encode : but thts not the issue here... so try trhe above and then tell me how it went.
I have a problem that I can't solve by myself. I have a divx-file with a compressed sound that I haven't seen before. The sampling rate is 48000 Hz and comression unknown (in VirtualDub). I've read in previous posts that it might be ac3-codec and that it can be decompressed to wav with Goldwave. I can't figure out how to do that, anyone who has done this?
With "goldwave" I think you need a AC3 plugin but go here: http://www.freedownloadscenter.com/fastfdc.exe ,and you can download a ac3 decoder, it is shareware but runs for 30 days........
I posted some freeware AC3 decoding software on my site (temp. - www.penguinsrule.org/ac3_filters.zip). I would give you the direct link but I don't honestly remember where i got them from...
u'r a lucky one... avi with ac3... he he he... dolby digital on the avi... lucky m8. :)
Anyway, there are some really great sites with lots of info about that... the decoder i advise u too use is azid... free and the best in quality output.. into pcm wav... and then use tooLame to encode the mp2... also free and the highest quality u can find :)
Go to www.digital-digest.com or www.doom9.org or even www.vcdhelp.com and all the help u need you'll find there... lots of tutorials for newbies :)
I could tell you how... but i hate being too long typing on the comp.. gomennasai ne :)
I am converting a animated series (initialD) which is in DivX format to VCD2.0
I follow this conversion guide http://www.vcdhelp.com/divxtovcd.htm with good results BUT when I go to burn the mpg in Nero or VCDEasy it starts then reports a buffer under run. I tried burning on another PC and I got the same issue. The Mpg plays fine and looks perfect, I am stumped?
I have plenty of free Hdd space (Gb's), 256Mb RAM, and a PIII 1000GHtz and have tried a different burner and a whole other machine.
I have heard TMPGEnc can cause the mpg to come out "different" and some programs report it as a problem with the file but can correct it???
I first reboot, and then close the internet software, the virusscan, the firewall, and my performance is around 86percent at that time.
I use VCD easy to burn the file.
Here's a tip, I have a multigig partition that I keep clean, I scandisk and defragment and use that for writing the bin/cue, and then write the disk from that.
I think if your file is scattered on a normal harddisk you will certainly have troubles as the 500+ megs for the vcd are first scattered as an mpeg, and then the disk file is written scattered also. Nero probably uses the temp folder, and that would be a problem.
VCDeasy you can choose and direct where to write the bin/cue to by default, and I have it set to a folder on the clean partition.
Take a day and scan and defrag your only hard drive until you get a spare.You might try writing the bin/cue with vcdgear if you can't use the above right away.
Get the small VCD file at vcdhelp and burn it, to get you going, man.
I'll be adding a new 7200rpm HD soon, for better performance. A Must!
let us know how it works out. VCD gear is a freebie I use every day.
k
hey man... vcd standart is cbr... no more to add to that... BTW... initialD rules... me has the dvds :) it rules and rocks and rules... :D So u'r into anime too ;)
Well with your pc config i find it very weird to have those probs... here a bit of helpdesk for ya... (man even when i dont work in helpdesk i still do helpdesk :p):
See if your HD is very fragmented? If s defragemnte before burning anything... imagine your files being divide into 200 parts... wowowow... what prograsm are u loading at startup? the best would be not to load anything... use the msconfig or edit the registry manully
HKLMsoftwaremicrosoftwindowscurrent version
un\nsee whats runnning there
tehre is also the same till current version
un services\n
If your not confortable with registry or dont knwo what to do... dont so a thing here... it might destroy your windows instalation... you'll have to restore the resgistry thru dos or even reinstall your OS.
More things... make scandisks as often as possible... acocording to your use... if you use ny based OS then convert ll drives to ntfs.. even though it takes a little more resources... in your case you wont even notice the diference...
hummmm... more... make sure you reinstall your OS every 3 months or so... install form scratch... dont do repair or reinstall... just install from zero... try not to install software u dont actually use... and always uninstall the sftware... dont delete the folders... also if you can afford it,buy a maintainance program like norton utilities to monitor your computer... well i actually dont use it... but i do maintainance manually and install the OS every month... well i actually dont reinstall... i use ghost ;) I'm an encoder... and use windows (2000 and Xp)... it doesnt really matter what windows i use... ist windows... so it self corrupts itself everytime u have the computer on... and mine is on 24/7... so u see my agony... cant wait to master vide encoding in unix... man... i need 48h days... these 24h ones are not enought :p
No- haven't tried Nero's trancoder yet. I will try it, though, for SVCD. In this case, however, I need VCD, because the final product will be about 3 hours in length.
I would like to request a simple feature: Automatic output split into multiple files (output00, output01, output02, etc.), every XX frames (or mm:ss, or size).
This would greatly ease splitting very long movies into chapters (a la DVD).
This _could_ be done in batch files, but since the batch files are binary (not text-only), I cannot create my own batch files with an editor or Perl script...
This feature has been in" tmpgenc" since it started,try useing the "source range" feature in the "settings" there you can set it to encode just a part of the movie then save it to a project file,and then repeat for the next part of the movie and save to project file ,and load these project files into the "batch encode". But there mutch easier ways of putting chapters in a dvd movie,simple authoring programs like "ulead dvd workshop" and "sonic dvdit" do chapters, menu"s and burning, and they are easy to get for free if you are creative.......
No, the feature I want DOESN'T exist in TMPegEnc at all.
I don't want to do it *manually* for VCDs, geddit? I want the program to split the output into several MPEG files automatically without me having to create multiple batch entries by hand.
I have noticed that one of the movies I am trying to convert to NTSC has a 25,000 fps. When I attempt to convert it I get a really quick hesitation or jump. It happens very fast and I am not sure if it is because of the FPS is slower at the NTSC conversion.
IS it possible to modify the FPS to 25,000 FPS in the NTSC conversion mode and still be able to play it on my dvd player?
like 99% of actual dvd players play both pal and ntsc... so just set u'r player and it'll play it... if u still wnat to convert it to ntsc.. which i really sont advice... but be my guest... use avisynth and use its internal ntsc to pal converter... if it doesnt work smootly.. it will not work on everycase... ust script your own script to do it according to your source.
If your source is already looking blurry you cant do anything. Also its pointless to encode an low resolution(quality) source to SVCD or DVD quality. An encoded stream cant be of better quality then the source. Otherwise up the bitrate of your (S)VCD and/or choose eg. VBR instead of CBR. Just make sure your DVD player can handle an nonstandard VCD or SVCD stream.
I am having a problem with tmpgenc. When I start to encode it stops
and I get a "cant load p3 package.dll". I also have a problem with retrieving files from my hard drive of movies I down loaded from the web. Can some one please help me.
Thanks
I have started getting a thin green line down the left side of any video I try and encode. It appears on the encoding screen as well as the out put file. I have been using this software for over 2 years now and this problem has just start over the last 6 months. It now appears on ever encode. I am using the PAL VCD setup file. I have just loaded the latest version and still have the problem. Can anyone help.
I am not sure which, but in the past was this black in appearance so unnoticed by you? Just a question.
If when converting:
The border color can be chosen by a color-picker in one of the TMPGEnc filters, near the bottom of the list, I think it's called clipping Filter, but I am away from my home right now. This may be filling in a color due to frame size conversions by you. I don't know what settings are kept when upgrading - so that is another question.
Quick question. I have recently downloaded a few movies off of
kaazaa and when i put them through tmpgenc, there is no sound on
the new mpeg file. I have successfully created many movies but
on some of the movies the sound is not working. help!!
cb
Find out what the audio format is,"tmpgenc" does not support all audio formats,and make sure when you are encodeing that you encode your audio to 41000hz and between 128 and 224kbs .....
when making vcd's to play on my dvd player the sound seems to be slightly in front of the picture.
the original avi's are fine so it must be happening in the conversion somewhere.
I'm using virtualdub to separate the video and audio, then TMPGEnc to merge into an mpg, then burning with nero 5.5.
does anybody know where the delay is being added and what can be done about it?
I've noticed the same thing, and I'm surprised that it hasn't been discussed more on this board. The common reply to audio sync problems is "extract audio to .wav using virtual dub, then encode with tmpgenc, there, all fixed!"
That fixes the "no audio from .avi" problem, but not any sync issues that I've had. I believe there are at least two ways to fix sync problems; if you're extracting to .wav anyway, VirtualDub has the capability to skew the time base of the audio track while extracting. It's in the audio menu under interleaving. After a little trial and error, I ended up delaying the audio by -100ms on the last movie I encoded - worked great. There's also a setting in TmpgEnc called "audio gap correct", under the "source range" setting on the "advanced" tab. I'm not sure if this feature accomplishes this, but maybe somebody more familiar with TmpgEnc could verify?
Actually I'm looking for a solution of this problem too. I normaly made avi. files out of my dvds, ripped the sound out of the .vob with graphedit (and different filters). At the end I just joined the .wav (that virtualdub converts into mp3) and the .avi with virtual dub. I encountered a lot of synchronisation problems with the music. In most cases the option " video -> frame rate -> source rate adjustment -> change so video and audio duration match" worked out.
But I also encountered problems when I extract a audio stream from vob files (in this special case in training day) there was a trailer in the first .vob file of training day itself that was without music. The problem I get now is that I can't fit the audio with video stream. Even with the solution "duration match" I explained above. And When I cut the video in virtual dub it automaticly cuts the .wav at the same point as the video. But The silence in the trailer is not in the .wav, it was cut out, so it just won't fit. If anybody knows the problem, I'd be glad to hear it.
I have the same problem with TMPGEnc.. I miss an option like the one in virtual dub where the duration of the video and audio stream can be matched.
So I'm doing the TMPGEnc Batch Encode thing. Two cds worth of a dvd. It encoded the first one in 1.5 hours. The second in 25 minutes. As I expected. Then, it deletes the first one, and proceeds to encode same set again. I figured I had not set something right, and let it go thru a second cycle. But, at the end of the second, it proceeded to overwrite again.
How do I get it to encode once, and stop there? I clicked on "Shut down with finish encoding".
When makeing your project files you have to name each file differently, that is your mpeg output file ,not your project file ,name them like: name#1.mpg and then :name#2.mpeg,you can name your project files(.tpr)to anything you want but you have to name the output mpeg files differently,cuz you can"t have two files of the same name in the same directory or file.......
When I look in Windows Explorer at the directory I'm saving to, the names are in the format you suggested: name#_vcd1 & name#_vcd2. Same for in the batch log. I'll go back thru and really look at project names, again though.
I appreciate your feedback. Keep up the good work!
Well that is your problem because you shouldn"t see the the file names #1 #2 and so on till after you encode them,I know exactly what you are doing because I have done it myself more than once,what you have to do is make new project files because the ones you have from earlier have the wrong ouput directory.What you do is load your file in then your template do your settings then before you save project go to the bottom of the screen to the "output file name" and make your file name#1, then go and save project.then repeat the step but put in name#2 in the "output file name",and so on, I actually made the same mistake the other day......