Hi to everyone, this is my first post to the forum. I'm still a newbie with video capture, although hopefully learning fast , so please be gentle...
My spec. info is as follows (unfortunately I can't remember the make of my Camcorder, although I don't think it's relevant to my problem):
PIII 800 (OC'd to 900)
Segate 30G
GA-6VXE7 VT82C693/VT82C691 - Via 4in1 4.35
PSU: 400W - Make unknown.
256Mb (2x128 SDRAM 133Mhz)
GF4 4200 MyVivo 128Mb - 30.82 Dets
W98SE
SB Live 128
Cannon S600,Philips WebCam (USB),BoederSmart Scan (USB), CD-R, CD-RW
I've searched the forum here and I haven't found anything relevant so here goes:
I'm trying to create an SVCD using Ulead Visual Studio 6.0.
I'm capturing the source from a camcorder (PAL) using the WinFast PVR utility that comes with my video card in AVI format with the Huffyuv codec at 352x288 25 fps (any higher resolution and I get dropped frames).
If I convert the raw video with TMPGEnc Plus 2.5 to SVCD I get very good quality. When I try to convert using VideoStudio (Create Video File, or Create SVCD) the quality is A LOT worse: the image is very blocky and blurred even in scenes with little movement. I checked the encoding options that TMPGEnc uses for SCVD and it uses CBR at 2500 kbs whereas VS uses VBR with a max of around 2300 (I'm at work at the moment so I can't check).
I tried encoding with TMPGEnc with the VS settings for SVCD and the result was still far superior.
I also tried resizing the source AVI to SVCD resolution with VirtualDub before passing it to VS but the results were the same.
So, the questions:
Why does TMPGEnc encode better?
What can I do with my source/VS to get better results?
Why does the VCD produced by VS (almost) look better than the SVC version?
How can I "fiddle" with the codec that VS uses? I can't find the option anywhere.
Will the 6.02 patch for VS make a difference? It does mention a change in MPEG coding. The problem is it states that to apply the patch "all components must be installed", my, hoperfully, full copy came free with the Geforce so I've no idea if I've got the "components" or not.
Thanks in advance,
Chris.
My spec. info is as follows (unfortunately I can't remember the make of my Camcorder, although I don't think it's relevant to my problem):
PIII 800 (OC'd to 900)
Segate 30G
GA-6VXE7 VT82C693/VT82C691 - Via 4in1 4.35
PSU: 400W - Make unknown.
256Mb (2x128 SDRAM 133Mhz)
GF4 4200 MyVivo 128Mb - 30.82 Dets
W98SE
SB Live 128
Cannon S600,Philips WebCam (USB),BoederSmart Scan (USB), CD-R, CD-RW
I've searched the forum here and I haven't found anything relevant so here goes:
I'm trying to create an SVCD using Ulead Visual Studio 6.0.
I'm capturing the source from a camcorder (PAL) using the WinFast PVR utility that comes with my video card in AVI format with the Huffyuv codec at 352x288 25 fps (any higher resolution and I get dropped frames).
If I convert the raw video with TMPGEnc Plus 2.5 to SVCD I get very good quality. When I try to convert using VideoStudio (Create Video File, or Create SVCD) the quality is A LOT worse: the image is very blocky and blurred even in scenes with little movement. I checked the encoding options that TMPGEnc uses for SCVD and it uses CBR at 2500 kbs whereas VS uses VBR with a max of around 2300 (I'm at work at the moment so I can't check).
I tried encoding with TMPGEnc with the VS settings for SVCD and the result was still far superior.
I also tried resizing the source AVI to SVCD resolution with VirtualDub before passing it to VS but the results were the same.
So, the questions:
Why does TMPGEnc encode better?
What can I do with my source/VS to get better results?
Why does the VCD produced by VS (almost) look better than the SVC version?
How can I "fiddle" with the codec that VS uses? I can't find the option anywhere.
Will the 6.02 patch for VS make a difference? It does mention a change in MPEG coding. The problem is it states that to apply the patch "all components must be installed", my, hoperfully, full copy came free with the Geforce so I've no idea if I've got the "components" or not.
Thanks in advance,
Chris.
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