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Hardeep_S
19 Feb 2004, 01:29 PM
Please Help Me.

I want to knoe how to tell if an avi is variable bitrate or constant bitrate. I have virtualdub and gspot. Can someone please tell me how to check that.

setarip
19 Feb 2004, 06:59 PM
If the audiostream is a CBR (Constant Bitrate) .MP3, its number of frames should be virtually identical to the number of audio samples. If it's VBR (Variable Bitrate) the number of frames may be as much as twice the number of video frames.

You may have to use a version of Virtual Dub prior to 1.5xx to see this type of information...

Hardeep_S
20 Feb 2004, 09:23 AM
Some of the avi files have like audio samples in the 100 millions. What's up with those?

setarip
21 Feb 2004, 01:51 PM
Once again:

You may have to use a version of Virtual Dub prior to 1.5xx to see this type of information...

(Audio stated as FRAMES, not SAMPLES)

Hardeep_S
22 Feb 2004, 07:43 PM
Thank You I got that solved.

Another question.

I'm encoding a video in TMPG. THe avi file is 576x240. When you select your souce file, what should i chose for aspect ratio, 1:1 (VGA) or 16:9 525 line (NTSC). In the MPEG settings, for video arrange method i chose Full Screen (keep aspect ratio).

Which aspect ratio should i chose for my source file?

1:1 VGA or 16:9 525 line (ntsc)

ps.: I'm converting it over to SVCD.

Hardeep_S
23 Feb 2004, 05:27 AM
What about avi's that are 640x272, 576x320, or 608x256

What should i choose the aspect ratio for the source file for them
converting them to SVCD and for video arrange method, choosing full screen (keep aspect ratio)

Hardeep_S
23 Feb 2004, 05:44 AM
One more thing, my tv is fullscreen

setarip
24 Feb 2004, 05:40 AM
"Thank You I got that solved."

My pleasure ;>}

megamachine
25 Feb 2004, 10:59 PM
Regarding your second question, best bet is to use the SVCD template for your settings. Click Load on the lower right side and browse to the TMPGEnc folder to find the template for your TV system (i.e. PAL or NTSC). That will load the settings you need.

divxdude
5 Mar 2004, 06:47 PM
the only two you should worry about are 4:3 and 16:9

4:3 = Full screen
16:9 = Wide Screen


Just choose the one that fits your video.