User User name Password  
   
Friday 28.11.2025 / 12:17
Search AfterDawn Forums:        In English   Suomeksi   Pĺ svenska
afterdawn.com > forums > archived forums > mpeg-1 and mpeg-2 encoding (avi to dvd) > dvd to svcd video not quite right
Show topics
 
Forums
Forums
DVD to SVCD video not quite right
  Jump to:
 
Posted Message
genemc
Newbie
_
27. May 2005 @ 11:14 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
I used the DVD to SVCD with TMPGEnc tutorial on this site. It fixed my audio sync problem. However, when there is relatively fast motion on the screen, every other line on the object in motion (example a person's body when walking) seems to be offset and pixelated. Once the motion slows down (stops walking) the video seems to be fine. My video is 16:9, 29.970, and interlaced.

Any ideas?

Thanks.
Advertisement
_
__
Minion
AfterDawn Addict
_
27. May 2005 @ 14:28 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
This sounds Like an interlace Issue...Are you seeing this on your Monitor or on your TV set?? Because interlaced Video will allways look that way on your PC"s Monitor because PC Monitors do not display interlaced Video properly....

Also if you are Ripping a DVD and converting it to SVCD and did it Properly you would have ended up with a SVCD File with a Frame rate of 23.976fps (Maybe with 2:3 or 3:2 pulldown) and when done this way there is no chance of interlace Problems....

Did the Method you used entail useing "DVD2AVI" to make a ".d2v" frameserver file to frame serve to TMPGEnc?? If so did you select the "Forced Film" option in DVD2AVI before makeing the ".d2v" file??



P-4 2.6ghz (Overclocked to 3.2ghz)
Abit IS7
1gb Dual Chanell DDR 400mhz
Zalman CNPS7000-CU Cooler(Modded with 50cfm Fan)
XFX Gforce 6600GT 128mb GDDR3 (500/1000)
Pinnacle DV500 ADVC Editing Card
RaidMax Scorpio ATX Case + 5 Led
genemc
Newbie
_
31. May 2005 @ 04:34 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
The original DVD was 16:9, 29.970, and interlaced. My TMPGEnc settings were 2 pass VBR and non-interlaced. I just viewed the mpg using PowerDVD and it looked weird.

I did not use Forced Film on DVD2AVI. I'll try that right now.

Thanks.
Minion
AfterDawn Addict
_
31. May 2005 @ 13:12 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Most Retail DVD"s are Made from Film which is Shot at 23.976fps(24) so to make this 23.976fps Progressive Film Footage DVD Compliant (29.976fps and Interlaced) they add what is called "3:2 Pulldown" which Splits some of the Frames up into Fields and uses combinations of Fields from different Frames to make up the extra Frames to make the Footage 29.976fps and interlaced...

So what the "Forced Film" option in DVD2AVI Does is it removes the 3:2 Pulldown which converts the Footage back to it"s 23.976fps Progressive State....(You can only use the "Forced Film" option on Movies that were originally shot on Film, You can tell if it was shot on Film when you are createing the D2V file the Statistics window will say "Film" or "99% Film" , If the Movie was Not Shot on Film the Statistics window will say "NTSC" instead of "Film")

When you encode the File with the "Forced Film" option enabled make sure you select the "NTSC Film" Template Or if not useing a Template then make sure that the "Encode Mode" is set to "3:2 pulldown When Playback" and the "Frame Rate" is set to "23.976fps(Internally 29.976fps)".....

Now when you encode the File useing these settings you should not get any interlace artifacts in High Motion scenes.....

Cheers

P-4 2.6ghz (Overclocked to 3.2ghz)
Abit IS7
1gb Dual Chanell DDR 400mhz
Zalman CNPS7000-CU Cooler(Modded with 50cfm Fan)
XFX Gforce 6600GT 128mb GDDR3 (500/1000)
Pinnacle DV500 ADVC Editing Card
RaidMax Scorpio ATX Case + 5 Led
genemc
Newbie
_
7. June 2005 @ 12:30 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Well I reran DVD2AVI and it is NTSC interlaced so I guess forced film won't help me. Could it be that I have FILM but it showed NTSC? I think I'll go through and try the forced film and see what happens anyways.

Thanks.
Minion
AfterDawn Addict
_
7. June 2005 @ 13:05 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
If the Video Type is NTSC interlaced then do not use the Forced Film option But Rather when you are encodeing in TMPGEnc go into the Advanced settings and double click the "De-Interlace" Filter and Try one of the De-interlace filters and see if that helps your Problem....

Cheers

P-4 2.6ghz (Overclocked to 3.2ghz)
Abit IS7
1gb Dual Chanell DDR 400mhz
Zalman CNPS7000-CU Cooler(Modded with 50cfm Fan)
XFX Gforce 6600GT 128mb GDDR3 (500/1000)
Pinnacle DV500 ADVC Editing Card
RaidMax Scorpio ATX Case + 5 Led
genemc
Newbie
_
8. June 2005 @ 04:50 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
OK. I'll try that. I think I looked at it earlier but didn't actually select a filter.

Thanks.
genemc
Newbie
_
9. June 2005 @ 07:51 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Perfect. That looks like it worked great for an interlaced clip. Now if I have a FILM (progressive) clip using TMPGEnc, then I guess I should use 3:2 pulldown on the advanced tab. Do I still have to Deinterlace? The Encode mode is forced to be 3:2 pulldown when playback.

Thanks.
Advertisement
_
__
 
_
Minion
AfterDawn Addict
_
9. June 2005 @ 11:58 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Hi, If you have a Progressive Film 23.976fps Clip then you encode it with the "encode Mode" set to "3:2 Pulldown When Playback" and set the Frame Rate to "23.976fps(Internally 29.976fps)" and you do Not need to use the De-interlace Filter as with 3:2 Pulldown you will not see interlace artifacts when viewed on your TV set....

Cheers

P-4 2.6ghz (Overclocked to 3.2ghz)
Abit IS7
1gb Dual Chanell DDR 400mhz
Zalman CNPS7000-CU Cooler(Modded with 50cfm Fan)
XFX Gforce 6600GT 128mb GDDR3 (500/1000)
Pinnacle DV500 ADVC Editing Card
RaidMax Scorpio ATX Case + 5 Led
Related links
Read AfterDawn.com's SVCD guides from here!
 
Related forum topics Posts Last post Forum room
Encoded SVCD - time moves slower on playback 2 6. February 2010 Video - Software discussion
SVCD slideshow quality very bad.. Help 7 16. December 2008 Nero discussion
Need help with fitting SVCD into CD 9 1. October 2008 DVD±R for newbies
Problems burning SVCD 5 23. January 2008 Nero discussion
Home Movie to Vcd or Svcd? 6 13. July 2007 Digital camcorders
express 6 slide shows & svcd 2 12. May 2007 Nero discussion
What suffix for my SVCD file? 8 23. March 2007 Video - Everything else
SVCD or VCD with PC aplication 2 5. February 2007 Nero discussion
Help Me Create TV Episode Series on DVD or SVCD in Volumes 1 20. January 2007 Video playback problems
trouble viewing SVCD 2 5. December 2006 Convert DVD to another format

 
afterdawn.com > forums > archived forums > mpeg-1 and mpeg-2 encoding (avi to dvd) > dvd to svcd video not quite right
 

Digital video: AfterDawn.com | AfterDawn Forums
Music: MP3Lizard.com
Gaming: Blasteroids.com | Blasteroids Forums | Compare game prices
Software: Software downloads
Blogs: User profile pages
RSS feeds: AfterDawn.com News | Software updates | AfterDawn Forums
International: AfterDawn in Finnish | AfterDawn in Swedish | AfterDawn in Norwegian | download.fi
Navigate: Search | Site map
About us: About AfterDawn Ltd | Advertise on our sites | Rules, Restrictions, Legal disclaimer & Privacy policy
Contact us: Send feedback | Contact our media sales team
 
  © 1999-2025 by AfterDawn Ltd.

  IDG TechNetwork