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i am a newbie in trying to convert dvd to vcd. it seems that i am successful in
ripping the dvd and able to create the d2v and wav file but when I am in
TMPG and start creating the mpg, when I try to play the produced mpg file there is no sound. i am not sure if it is with TMPG or a previous step. I tried playing the WAV file generate by DVD2AVI and it seems okay. any suggestions?
Make sure your "wav" file reader in your "vfapi plugins" is at a high enough priority like at "1",make sure you have the proper codecs to play back the mpeg2 layer audio in your mpeg file..try encodeing the wav file seperately to mpeg audio, then listen to it and see if it is there, and if it is you can multiplex it with your video file and have a working mpeg/vcd file, make sure you set the audio frequency to 41000hz and a bitrate of at least 128kbs....
Give this a try to establish whether the audio is actually in the movie file or not.
Download a program called Virtualdub, load in your movie file assuming it is MPEG1.
Click File>File information and have a look at the info where it says audio track. It should say 44khz stereo,224kbps layer II.
If it doesn't then the problem is that the movie doesn't contain any audio.
If it does the problem is with media player.
Try to play the file in Virtual dub to see if you can here the audio.
I put tmpge on my other computer and when I try to encode it says this AVI file is not supported or something like that but it works on my first comp also it will do the audio whats wrong
It is most likely you need the relevant codec installed on your system to decode the movie.
If it's a DiVx movie then install DiVx 4.12. If that doesn't work install 3.11.
If neither work then you either have the wrong codecs or you may need to increase the priority of the Direct show multimedia file reader' in the enviromental settings to 2 and lower the others to 0.
I have the same problem with all mpeg2 files on my computer. I can not open them as a video source in TMPGenc. The error message is "The file ... unsupported". If there is a codec problem then why I can play that mpeg2 files in Windows Media Player or Ulead Video Studio without any problems? I set the priority for DierectShow Media File Reader to 2 and all other priorities to 0. But is did not help. I was happy with previous version and I payd for the TMPGenc Plus 2.54a. But I can not use it. What to do? Please HELP!
Because certain files will play on Media player, this is no indication whatsoever that you have the correct codecs installed which other software can use.
You most probably have a software DVD player installed on your system or other software installed which is allowing Media player to use it's codec.
Also Ulead probably has it's own codec for opening MPEG2 files.
Not all software can access and use these codecs.
As far as I can tell, nothing until you "clip" the movie.
If you clip the movie then the bit you are left with will stretch to fill the screen (keeping it's aspect ratio) with the first one, but with the 2nd you just get black bars for the bit you clipped.
Try clipping about 40 or so pixels off each edge of your movie and then compare the two - it'll become clear :-)
"Fullscreen (keep aspect ratio 1)"=Maximises window at the same time keeping aspect ratio..
Fullscreen(keep aspectratio 2)=Maximizes window at the same time keeping aspect ratio and displaying movie in full screen
That's just what it says in the tips, I think Magic is right.
Fullscreen (keep aspect ratio 2) shows you the movie in full screen with the parts that have been clipped.
When I try to encode a movie from avi/divx to mpeg1,I see an error message:"The error occured when ACM was initialized.I have a pentium 200 mmx with 48Mb.Thank you in advance.
Could be something to do with an audio codec you need or need to reinstall on your PC.
The ACM message refers to the windows Audio Compression Manager which is used to decode or encode audio using the audio codecs you have installed on your system.
Find out what the audio is in the movie file and install the appropiate codec or extract the audio to a wav file with a program such as Virtualdub and use that as your audio source.
Neither do I.
What is it you are attempting to achieve with IFOEDIT. I thought IFOEDIT was used for VOBS so how does it link with TMPG and why are you encoding the same MPEG again?
I'm making the Tmpg File in Ifoedit , which hold the information about
the I,B,P frames, just to be sure that my movie will be in sync when
i later remux it to a vob in ifoedit...
Well I'm still not quite sure what you are trying to achieve with IFOEDIT, because it seems you are doing things a long way round.
If all you are trying to do is convert a movie to MPEG2 and then author that to DVD then why dont you simply encode the d2v file from DVD2AVI using TMPG as normal and then import your MPEG2 file into a DVD authoring program.
There are many many DVD authoring programs out there now which seem far more simple to use than the slow and cumbersome method you seem to be using.
It even states on the doom site that this method you are using is sooo slow, so drop this method and have a look around for a good DVD authoring program and save yourself some hassle.
When I open a MJPEG-Avi the preview-window is black, also encoded Mpegfiles are black. I only can use the pinnacle DC10+ codec MJPEG with the captureboard. Any suggestions?
I made some tests in the "envroment settings/VFAPIplugin" and unchecked with success the AVI2(openDML)File Reader-Plugin, which is builtin the TMPEGEnc. Now also Mjpeg-Avis are shown in the window! Maybe this will help anybody else! It is the best Avi-Mpeg-Tool I ever tested, with very good results.
You mean you can only use Pinnacles own codec for hardware compression. Theres nothing stopping you from using a software compressor such as the DIVX codec.
I don't have the DC10+ so the following information Iam going to give is speculation.
Ok, seeing as the DC10+ is a hardware encoder which uses an internal MJPEG codec it is therefore sensible to assume you will need another software MJPEG codec installed on your system to decode the file, so media player and TMPG can open it correctly.
Heres a daft thing. Even though Media player may open and play the file using the drivers or codecs Pinnacle supply with the card it doesn't necessarily mean TMPG will open it correctly.
I would suggest trying to install another MJPEG codec on your system such as PICVideo MJPEG codec or Morgan Multimedia MJPEG codec and see what happens.
I don"t think you can use it as a plugin but I"m sure that you can import or export file from or to "tmpgenc"..I think "ulead media studio" uses it"s own mpeg encoder......
Hi, all.
I have vhs and dv videos, and i want to convert it to mpeg2 (TMPG) through IE1394. Could you send me, if you have, your templates for SVCD(XSVCD) on my
email: farmer@lenta.ru
Thanks to ASHY and Minion for very good forum.
From Russia with love.Farmer
Another option is to use AVIutil. http://www.fpscentral.hu/download/software/aviutl97f.zip Open the AVI with AVIutil then see if the file will play in AVIutil at the point it normally freezes, if it plays ok then choose the option to create a project file and load that into TMPG.
Hi there..
when i convert to vcd from avi..the quality of the vcd is the same as avi file..is there any settings that i can change on the tmp encoder.to give me better quality on vcd?..
So you not only want the quality to be the same as the avi, you want it to be better than the avi?I don"t know if your are just inexperienced, but the quality of the mpeg you make useing the standard vcd template will not give you as good quality as the avi you are encodeing unless the quality of the avi is really bad,Mpeg is not a format used to make movies look better,so the quality of the mpeg is directly related to the quality of the avi file and the quality of the encoder...The more bitrate that is used the closer the quality of your mpeg file will be to the "avi" file..right now I am encodeing a svcd with a max bitrate of 8000kbs and a minimum of 2000kbs,and i get as close to the original dvd as possible but I can still tell the differance.And the vcd template is 1150kbs, so I"m encodeing with a bitrate up to 6 times higher than the vcd standard and still it won"t be exactly the same quality as the original..so the one thing that will give you better quality is raise the bitrate, if you are doing vcd"s a bitrate of 1650kbs will give you much better quality and get you about 60 minutes per cd.....
I never thought I would see the day when I could make a point to Minion... but it *is* possible for an MPG to look better than the original AVI. I just did it myself! :-)
Remember the target here is VCD, which suggests playback on a DVD machine. Many DVD systems have "block noise reduction" and other tricks built into them which mean you can actually get away with lower bitrates than on a PC where Media Player is probably used and it just displays the MPEG raw.
You can use the colour correction features in TMPGEnc to optimise the colours for your TV if the AVI has a bit too much contrast for example, and if you notice a lot of dithering in your AVI file try using the Noise Reduction filter too, as that can smooth out the noise.
In fairness to Minion he is absolutely right about the bitrates and resolutions - if you have a "perfect" AVI file at a high resolution don't even try to get close to it with VCD, if the bitrate and resolution limitations of VCD don't hit you then the chances are the physical ability of your DVD player will. Many DVD players can play SVCD but the drive simply isnt fast enough to read the data from the CD.
You could also try the trick I suggested in another post - stretch your VCD movie so you end up with an out-of-proportion movie, then use the picture settings on your TV to squish it back giving you better vertical resolution.
Thanks Minion & Magic for your speedy and honest replys:)
It is much appreciated Fellas:)
To answer Mnions Question on me being inexperienced..Yes im very nOOby at this..ive only being doin this for 3days now.and im finding it alot of fun..and in them 3days ive done a TOTAL of 6VCD Movies sucessfully.and thats not including the 2 VCD's i screwed up..hehehe.So i hope that gives u an idea of wot u r dealing with..:(..MuuAhaAhAaaaaa..
Magic..thanks for your input on my situation too dude..:)
ill reply l8ter to tell you guys how it went..
ok bi for now..thanks again:)
Are you saying you want to raise the bitrate in "tmpgenc" for encodeing??To do this you have to load the "unlock.mfc" template from the extra folder...this will unlock ALL the settings so make sure every thing is the way you want it, go over every setting because when you load the unlock.mfc template all the settings can change....
All I want to do is make the file smaller. Right now it's 400mb and i'm trying to cut that in half. My friend told me to use tmpgenc to change the bitrate... i'm not sure if that means to lower it or raise it. What settings am i supposed to check for? thank you!
I don't know why you want to make it smaller, but if you do lower the bitrate you will also lower the quality and if you are lowering it lower than the standard bitrate for VCD it will look terrible.
Any way this is what you need to look for...
Open TMPG, load the standard VCD template by clicking the load button then click the load button again and this time look in the folder called extra.
Click the file called unlock.mcf then click the setting button at the bottom right, click the video tab and where it says 'Rate control mode' choose CBR from the drop down menu then underneath change the bitrate to a lower value.
The lower you choose the smaller the file size and lower quality the movie.
Next click the 'system' tab and change the stream type to 'MPEG-1 Video cd(non standard)'
Now encode.
Just a quick note.... please don't fall for the trap of thinking that raising the bitrate so the file gets larger than 400Mb will improve the quality - it won't. MPEG is a "lossy" compression format which means that to get the file down to that size you destroy some of the information. That information can't then be retrieved (although you can use special software to attempt to clean up the picture).
If you read the question it states that the original file is DIVX and want's to halve the size from 400mb to a 200mb MPEG.
Which obviously means that the bitrate will need to be lowered thus creating a lower quality movie as I don't think that there is an encoder in the world which can create better or similar quality looking MPEGs with a smaller file size than the original AVI.
Also the Mpeg would indeed have to be larger than 400mb to acheive anywhere near the same quality as the AVI as MPEG files are always larger than the original AVI.