Burn Avi to VCD?
|
|
ps357
Suspended due to non-functional email address
|
10. April 2007 @ 07:42 |
Link to this message
|
hey im a newbie here, does anyone know any Free programs to use to brun AVI files to VCD? thanks in advance
if you dont do it, someone else will
|
Advertisement
|
  |
|
aldaco12
AfterDawn Addict
|
11. April 2007 @ 04:30 |
Link to this message
|
THREAD MOVED
.......................................................................
The simplest applications I imagine are:
- TMPGEnc 2.5 free to encode (AVI ---> PAL/NTSC VCD MPG)
- VCDGear to auhtor a VCD (MPG --> bin/cue VCD image)
The only TMPGEnc 2.5 free limitation is the impossibility to load/encode MPEG-2 (thet is, SVCD or DVD mpegs), so it suits your needs.
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 11. April 2007 @ 04:31
|
AfterDawn Addict
|
11. April 2007 @ 13:37 |
Link to this message
|
hey so if my AVI film is 700mb... after i convert it with TMPEG how big will it be?
|
whassup
Member
|
21. April 2007 @ 18:54 |
Link to this message
|
Use a bitrate calculator to determine how large you WANT your file to be.
|
fandr78
Member
|
6. May 2007 @ 14:35 |
Link to this message
|
aldaco12,
Hello, i try your method,but TMPGEnc encodes my movie from a 692MB movie to a almost 900MB movie.I tried many other video conversion programs,but got the same result.Why does it get that big?Man this is so frustrating.I could easy put it on DVD but i dont want to waste a disc for a 692MB movie...Do you have any idea why this is happening?Thanks in advance.
Franco
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 6. May 2007 @ 14:36
|
bulldogz
Suspended permanently
|
12. May 2007 @ 17:12 |
Link to this message
|
Hey if your video file size is 900mb then all you have to do is burn it to 2 cds.to do that you will need this software. It's a trial but I think you can use it ten times.Hope this helps!
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 16. May 2007 @ 13:18
|
ukGary
Newbie
|
13. May 2007 @ 01:50 |
Link to this message
|
u could try allok AVI to DVD, VCD converter. It has an easy to use interface and u can select the quality of the output file to match the size of ur disc space.
Great for cramming 2 episodes of lost onto one cd.
|
aldaco12
AfterDawn Addict
|
16. May 2007 @ 04:40 |
Link to this message
|
Quote: Hello, i try your method,but TMPGEnc encodes my movie from a 692MB movie to a almost 900MB movie.I tried many other video conversion programs,but got the same result. Why does it get that big?
Ignore all the crap. VCD are MPEG-1 encoded with video bitrate = 1500 kbps CBR, and you cannot do anything to avoid 1' VCD movie being = 10 MB.
whassup method is only used for DVD movies, whose video bitrate is 2500-8500 kbps VBR and which can have audio 128-448 kbps CBR [either MP2 or AC3].
VCD has video = MPEG-1 1500 kbps CBR and audio MP2 = 224 CBR, and therefore I assume your movie was 90' long.
You can do this:
1) buy a DVD player capable to play DivX files. Time needed: time needed to burn a CD. Quality loss = none.
2) Transform the AVI into 2 VCD MPEG-1 files (movie_CD1.mpg and movie_CD2.mpg). TMPGenc's command is Setting___Advanced___Select Range (0-F for movie_CD1 and F+2 --> end for movie_CD2 [F=frame]). When done, author two VCDs. Usually a movie is about 2h, and therefore needs two 80' CD-R.
Time needed: some hours. Quality loss: depends on the input movie. Please note the VCD movie will have to become a 352x288/240 (PAL/NTSC) movie.
3) Study the CQ encoding ( http://www.kvcd.net/portal/index.php ), get the TMPGEnc KVCD templates ( http://kvcd.net/dvd-models.html , expecially http://kvcd.net/KVCD-CQ-352x240-_NTSCFilm_-PLUS.mcf and http://kvcd.net/KVCD-CQ-352x288-_PAL_-PLUS.mcf) templates and transform the AVI into 1 KVCD M1V (K-MPEG-1 video) + M2V audio. Once done, multiplex M1V and MP2 with TMPGEnc choosing, as type, MPEG-1 (non-standard).
Alas , you have to 'guess' the Q value (KVCD are CQ=Constant Quality ancoded movies) which gives, as output, a 800 MB M1V file.
There are applications to provided such estimates, but aren't precise (they make an estimate based on the choice of a sub-set of the input movie).
Time needed: many many hours. Quality loss = a little more than VCD.
What to do, then? You must choose.
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 16. May 2007 @ 04:51
|
whassup
Member
|
16. May 2007 @ 14:34 |
Link to this message
|
Quote: Ignore all the crap. VCD are MPEG-1 encoded with video bitrate = 1500 kbps CBR, and you cannot do anything to avoid 1' VCD movie being = 10 MB.
whassup method is only used for DVD movies, whose video bitrate is 2500-8500 kbps VBR and which can have audio 128-448 kbps CBR [either MP2 or AC3].
VCD has video = MPEG-1 1500 kbps CBR and audio MP2 = 224 CBR, and therefore I assume your movie was 90' long.
Actually, VCD has an 1150 kbps video bitrate. My method works for creating an xVCD, as long as your stand-alone can handle it. Most newer DVD players (ie. any cheapie DVD player bought in last 3-4 years) can handle it.
|
georgeluv
Member
1 product review
|
16. May 2007 @ 20:43 |
Link to this message
|
forget vcds, burn kvcds.
kvcd = entire movie on one cd-r that will still play in any player that plays vcds. extra points if you make a ksvcd and do the header trick.
|
fandr78
Member
|
17. May 2007 @ 12:35 |
Link to this message
|
Originally posted by georgeluv: forget vcds, burn kvcds.
kvcd = entire movie on one cd-r that will still play in any player that plays vcds. extra points if you make a ksvcd and do the header trick.
Wow i must look into this header trick!! :)
Franco
|
Advertisement
|
  |
|
whassup
Member
|
17. May 2007 @ 13:03 |
Link to this message
|
You've gotta remember that video quality will significantly decrease when you try to drop the bitrates.
With DVD's costing pennies, making kvcd/xvcd/xsvcd/ksvcd isn't as glamorous as it used to be.
|