rebootjim
Member
I thought I knew my way around SVCD, but this has me baffled.
This particular avi is 14.985fps (half NTSC), with fairly normal audio.
It's actually two clips, joined and filtered in vdub.
Ultimately, I want to cut it into 3 clips, either in vdub, or the encoder (Mainconcept, Canopus, or tmpgenc, doesn't matter), and author to SVCD.
I could make a dvd from it, but the quality isn't there.
I have extracted audio, resampled audio, converted audio, remuxed audio, and generally been messing with this project for almost 2 weeks.
The audio is perfect on the original avi's and on the joined as well, but once encoded to mpeg (vcd, svcd, dvd, I tried all 3), it warbles, like a fairly quick vibratto effect, and it really sucks.
Anyone have any ideas how to get the nice clean, crisp audio to stick around after encoding?
I have ONE successful attempt, and that's by muxing the audio and video in dvdlab during compiling. Every other attempt to mux/encode audio produces crap.
This particular avi is 14.985fps (half NTSC), with fairly normal audio.
It's actually two clips, joined and filtered in vdub.
Ultimately, I want to cut it into 3 clips, either in vdub, or the encoder (Mainconcept, Canopus, or tmpgenc, doesn't matter), and author to SVCD.
I could make a dvd from it, but the quality isn't there.
I have extracted audio, resampled audio, converted audio, remuxed audio, and generally been messing with this project for almost 2 weeks.
The audio is perfect on the original avi's and on the joined as well, but once encoded to mpeg (vcd, svcd, dvd, I tried all 3), it warbles, like a fairly quick vibratto effect, and it really sucks.
Anyone have any ideas how to get the nice clean, crisp audio to stick around after encoding?
I have ONE successful attempt, and that's by muxing the audio and video in dvdlab during compiling. Every other attempt to mux/encode audio produces crap.
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