.TS FILES, HOW DO I BURN THEM TO A DVD?
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Member
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12. September 2007 @ 11:51 |
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Originally posted by Ripper: Try messing around with the settings then - I have a feeling this is going to be your best bet.
Try setting the output to MPEG - then you can always re-encode that to .vob if it works.
I tryed mpegII, it didnt work, the output file was even less then before.
signature limitations are lame.
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Member
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12. September 2007 @ 11:59 |
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at 11mb mark, an error pops up.
FFMPEG.EXE ENCOUNTERE A PROBLEM AND NEEDS TO CLOSE.
signature limitations are lame.
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AfterDawn Addict
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12. September 2007 @ 12:24 |
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Meh, I'm clueless then - as I said before, I don't work with Blu Ray or HDTV files at all.
Call geek squad, heh.
Sorry.
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Member
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12. September 2007 @ 12:29 |
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:(
signature limitations are lame.
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Senior Member
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12. September 2007 @ 13:46 |
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Member
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12. September 2007 @ 14:51 |
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Originally posted by rdmercer1: convertxtodvd will work with the files, and after you are done with convertxtodvd run the output with dvd shrink
I tried it, it freezes at 21%
signature limitations are lame.
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ddp
Moderator
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12. September 2007 @ 18:22 |
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what is your system specs plus free storage space of your hard drive?
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Member
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13. September 2007 @ 06:05 |
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I have a p4
120 gig hd
1gig of ram
signature limitations are lame.
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ddp
Moderator
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13. September 2007 @ 17:26 |
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how much of the 120 gig is empty? what make of dvd disks are you using?
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Member
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13. September 2007 @ 17:29 |
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40 gig free, but it is heavily fragmented, I plan on restoring, but I wanted to burn these files first.
As for the disks, it doesnt matter, I cant even get the files encoded to put them on the disc.
signature limitations are lame.
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Member
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2. October 2007 @ 07:22 |
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I just got a new computer and it wont even play the files, wtf is the deal.
320 gig hd and 2gig of ram
signature limitations are lame.
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deadlove
Suspended permanently
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2. October 2007 @ 17:43 |
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That sounds like you need the right codecs/players..
VLC is reported to play .TS files straight.
Now I'm going to do a little guessing as blu-ray and hd-dvd are both a long way in the future for me...
I have a feeling that once you copy the .TS files to your pc they will be the same as from certain tv hdd recorders (same file extension)..
If so then maybe this link will point you in the right direction. http://www.sat-industry.net/forums/archive/index.php/t-17043.html
Now I'm a little strange.. I would be more likely to try using this method http://wesleytech.com/backupbluray-guide/83/ to get the files first... and then as they seem to be mpeg2 I would set avi:demux on them to make standard avi files of a nice size to attack with convertx. Once in avi format I know how to join and split them to get a nice sensible break point (large scene change or whatever)
I really hope that helps some.. It took me ages to hunt down that info... Nowhere does there seem to be any straight info on your project
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 2. October 2007 @ 17:55
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Newbie
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30. November 2007 @ 13:44 |
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try this:
Step 1: Download pvastrumento or ProjectX, install them.
Step 2: Convert the .ts files into Mpegs.
Step 3: Use a normal program to burn the onto a disk, Nero should work.
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