widescreen

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  • cole
    Member
    Member
    • Jun 2002
    • 51

    widescreen

    i was just watching my first vcd movie that i made
    and i have notice that the black bars on top and bottom are a lot bigger than the original dvd, why? i have a regular tv (not widescreen)so i guess i will always have those bars but can they be smaller?
    thank you
  • setarip
    Retired
    • Dec 2001
    • 24955

    #2
    If you made it using TMPGEnc, experiment with the various "Video Arrange Method" settings under the "Advanced" tab...

    If you made it solely using NERO, what you see is what you get...

    Comment

    • admin
      Administrator
      • Nov 2001
      • 8954

      #3
      Have a look at this little guide on ensuring the proper aspect ratio when encoding a VCD/SVCD in TMPGEnc :

      A guide on how to convert your movie file to a VideoCD compliant MPEG-1 file using TMPGEnc for VideoCD authoring
      Visit Digital Digest and dvdloc8.com, My Blog

      Comment

      • Mark Madness
        Member
        Member
        • May 2002
        • 90

        #4
        What might have happened is that you may have encoded the movie at the default aspect ratio of DVD which is 1.5:1 unlike a television's aspect ratio of 1.33:1. This ends up giving a more horizontally stretched picture hence the bigger black bars.

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        • benderman
          Digital Video Specialist
          Digital Video Specialist
          • Nov 2001
          • 770

          #5
          @Mark Madness: A 1.5:1-DVD? DVDs can only have 4:3 or 16:9.
          don't trust in guides

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          • Mark Madness
            Member
            Member
            • May 2002
            • 90

            #6
            I understand that. You are correct for standard televisions. However, if you rip a dvd and then encode it on a program such as Flask MPEG, it recognizes the video at a default resolution of 720 x 480 aka 1.5:1. Of course this isn't the proper aspect ratio to properly view the movie. I don't exactly know why it does this.

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