A question about Audio Gap/Sync correction in DVD Author 2.0. I've fiddled around with it a bit, but it doesn't seem to do much when I take a look at the preview. If the audio is ahead of the video, I want to make the gap correction negative, yes (e.g. -200ms)? Is there some trick to getting it just right? I've been working on this one project for ages, it seems, and can't seem to get it right.
Audio Sync Correction
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actually if the audio is AHEAD of the video, setting it back (-) does the trick. as for a sure fire method, you won't find one. experience only. i can get it in one or two tries, just encode a section of dialogue, not the whole file"One day men will look back and say I gave birth to the 20th Century". Jack The Ripper - 1888
Columbo moments...
"Double Shock" "The Greenhouse Jungle" "Swan Song" FORUM RULES
"You try to contrive a perfect alibi, and it's your perfect alibi that's gonna hang ya."
(An Exercise In Fatality, 1974)
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So negative is best, then? And as for encoding a bit of dialogue I'm using DVD Author _after_ I encode with TPMGEnc, so seemingly the only way to test the audio is after burning the DVD. Am I missing an intermediate step here?Comment
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it obviously must
for TMPGEnc look at it this way:
A ----------------
B ---------
A is audio, B is video, if A is ahead you want it BACK (-). that's how i visualize it, that's how it works with TMPGEnc."One day men will look back and say I gave birth to the 20th Century". Jack The Ripper - 1888
Columbo moments...
"Double Shock" "The Greenhouse Jungle" "Swan Song" FORUM RULES
"You try to contrive a perfect alibi, and it's your perfect alibi that's gonna hang ya."
(An Exercise In Fatality, 1974)
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i don't like to (and usually can't) correct a DV genius, but this is one thing i'm sure about lil buddy.
no sweat"One day men will look back and say I gave birth to the 20th Century". Jack The Ripper - 1888
Columbo moments...
"Double Shock" "The Greenhouse Jungle" "Swan Song" FORUM RULES
"You try to contrive a perfect alibi, and it's your perfect alibi that's gonna hang ya."
(An Exercise In Fatality, 1974)
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