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Yes program needs MKV input, I want to output to AVI (DivX or Xvid) with either AAC or AC3 5.1 sound, MKV's are too large and I want to play them back on my Xbox first gen, or via my external media portable box which doesn't support MKV.
Hello All,
I'm new to this and learning by trial and error. I've searched for answers to this question but not having luck. Thought someone might be kind enough to enlighten me.
I've created a project with tmpgenc DVD author 3 with divx. It includes video of a Play I recorded and a slideshow of photo's I put together in Windows Movie Maker. I was hoping to add one more thing before I burn the DVD's. I recorded a soundtrack of the Play and have the music in mp3 files.
The Question....Can I put those mp3 data files on this DVD I'm about to create? I was hoping to give a DVD to the cast with the video, slideshow and the mp3 files so they could use the files anyway they like, i.e put the mp3 files on their ipod.
You will not be able to put mp3 files on the DVD with TMPGEnc DVD Author 3. Extra files such as mp3's are non-standard for the DVD Video format. So you can either create a data DVD with all of the various video and audio files, or you can create a video DVD with the videos and slideshow but no mp3 files.
..scratch that. You can put the mp3 files in the root directory, but you must do this after output in DVD Author 3 and BEFORE you burn it. So after you output the files to your hard drive, find the output folder (where the VIDEO_TS and AUDIO_TS folder is) and drop your mp3's into this folder (but not into the video_ts or audio_ts folder). You can then burn the contents of the folder to the DVD with the writing tool.
How do you access the mp3s? Well, will have to load the DVD into your computer's DVD drive, go to "My Computer", and right click on the DVD drive. Select "Explore" from the menu and you will then be able to see the files on the disc and copy them to your hard drive, etc.
YES!!! It worked perfectly! You're a genius. Thanks for the clear instructions. You were a huge help. Too bad I didn't post the question sooner...I had already burned 8 DVD's without the mp3 files thinking it was impossible. Oh well... but I'm thrilled about this new knowledge. It'll really come in handy for future recordings. Thanks again.
i just read, that this beta is available upon request. does it include customers to get their hands on that? i would love to accelerate my conversions :(
When i go to preview my project via the simulation section of the software ... the audio from the project is audible however I just have a black screen fro the visual content! Any ideas why?
>Can you playback the video in the Cut-edit screen? What type of source files are you using?
Yes the problem is still the same although on the source page and timeline section of the cut edit screen I can see the thumbnails no problem. The files I am using are all .AVI
On another note I am new to using this software (3rd day actually) and think it is awesome for what can be acheived in menu creation ... I truly hold it in high esteem. I have used nero vison for years and feel that this has every right to rival Nero however ... my 1st project was fine and I have created a DVD I am 110% satisfied with (minus the fact I was unable to view any simulations) now working on my 2nd project I am also experiencing a complete failure to complete the output of the DVD to burn later ... the output window show visual progress of conversion but has now on two occasions hanged at no specific point during the conversion... 1st at around 2% and 2nd at around 95%. Hmm what is the problem with this s/w ... it promises great things and I really like the the user friendly aspect but these problems really need to be ironed out. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Update I have fixed the second part of my problem, I created a source folder and made sure all of my source files are being read from the same location on one hard drive and not scattered among several hard drives. This has seemed to have fixed the problem. However Iam still unable to view a simulation of the project.
>Can you see your menus in the simulation stage?
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>One thing you can try is while your content is playing in the simulation stage, right click on the video and activate Overlay Mode Display.
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>Also, close any other apps related to video, such as video players.
Strangely enough all of a sudden the simulation section has began working, however the one particular avi file woudl crash it ... law and behold I deactivate Overlay Mode Display and everything thing is fine ... im gonna output the project and see what happens! cheers buddy!
I'm not 100% sure about this, but I think it bypasses your video card to display the video.
The only reason I've used it is when I've taken screenshots of DVD Author 3 and the video does not show up. Enabling/disabling Overlay mode solves the problem.
I have a project where I used the Audio gap function to synchronize the audio and video (400 ms). All looks perfectly in synch in the Source cut-edit preview as well as the Simulation, but after outputting to a DVD folder, the audio and video are way out of synch. If it makes any difference, I did use Cut-edit to remove some unwanted material. Do these cuts also get applied to the audio? I would sure hope so.
This is very frustrating to have everything look perfect before I do the output only to have the result flawed, especially when it takes 3-4 hours to see the results. At first I thought TDA3 was a great tool, but I am starting to wonder.
As a test, I removed all video edits and tried this again...the audio is still way out of synch despite the preview and simulation being perfect. What's the purpose of being able to preview and simulate if the end results are not going to be similar?
Is this the same ASF source files from before? I have a feeling that the ASF format is the problem here. You can try updating Windows Media Player to the latest version to see if that helps. It could also be that the files have corrupt or damaged headers. I don't think TMPGEnc DVD Author 3 will be able to correct the headers for ASF files.
How much is the output audio off by? Way more than 400ms?
The audio is off by a lot more than 400ms...I would guess a couple seconds or so.
I believe I have the latest version of Windows Media Player but I will check. I'm curious to know how the version of WMP would affect this? I'm not playing back the output using WMP rather I'm using Nero's Showtime and it and WMP are both showing the same synch issue.
I am currently processing using 2 pass VBR encoding to see if that helps at all. If that fails, I will try using some other software to encode the ASF to MPG format and then use that MPG file as the source in TDA3.
Windows Media Player installs DirectX Media Object codecs which the ASF format supports. DVD Author 3 uses the codecs installed by Windows Media Player to decode video that use them.
The problem is, your ASF file could use a different codec since ASF is just a container format. It could simply be a codec that TMPGEnc DVD Author can't handle very well.
If you have another program that can convert it to MPEG, then I'd say do that first.
I've tried so many different things that I am not sure if I have done that or not. In any case, I'm not sure that would do me much good since of the objectives while making this DVD is to get the audio in synch with the video. I suppose though that once I get the DVD folder output without audio gap correction, I could try using it as the source and hen try the audio gap on that.
OK, I just let TDA3 encode the problem ASF without any edits of any kind (except for setting the audio level to 75%) and no menu and output it to a DVD folder. I then used that output's DVD folder as the source for a second (and hopefuly final!) project. Not surprising, editing the clip in the second project was much, much smoother and easier than in the first project where I was editing the ASF source. So, I applied my needed video edits, audio gap and audio fades, created my menu and let it output. The results were what I expected. So, the key with these ASF files is to let TDA3 convert them to VOB format and then use the DVD folder as the source for the final project.
I have a problem with reusing VOB files in TMPGEnc DVD Author 1.5.
Scenario:
- A DVD has been successfully created with TDA.
- one of the films from that DVD should be reused for another TDA project
- VTS_03_1.VOB and VTS_03_2.VOB are copied on disc and tragged into the 'Add File' field of a new project. The first VOB file is accepted as input, however when editing the file it only contains the first 7 minutes, although the VOB file is 45 mins long.
- I also tried to merge VOB files 1+2 into a single file. This worked ok however when editing the new VOB file the length is displayed as 15 mins and still does not contain the full length.
- I tried to repair the VOB files but did not find any tool which changes the length of the file to the correct value.
I have a bunch of ASF files that I am using as the audio/video source to create DVDs. I am getting digital overload (pops) on the high levels of the audio once the DVD output is created which was not present in the ASF source file. These ASF files contain decent quality audio (music). While editing the video, I went into the audio properties and set the level to 99% to be safe but after the DVD folder creation process (3-4 hours later), there is popping in the peaks of the audio.
I have done a few projects where instead of using the ASF's audio for the project, I have used a WAV file that I had previously extracted out of the source ASF file, and those projects all came out fine with no audio clipping.
Is there a problem with the ASF->MPEG encoding process which increases the audio and causes this digital audio overload? Any suggestions?
I am currently processing a project with the audio level set to 95% and we'll see if that helps.
95% did not help. The audio level seems to be quite high in the source file so I dropped it down to 75% and it is processing now.
I don't care about Dolby Digital, so I'm wondering if rendering the audio to something else would help...perhaps there is something in the Dolby Digital rendering process causing a slight jump in amplitude and the subsequent digital popping?
What you need it for? I don´t thin it is possible. Better use editing solutions like AVID or so. What you can do is to download the AVID DNxHD Codec (its free) and compile a Quicktime.