Alright so im converting my avi videos to vcd obviously. Now i can convert first two files, which happen to be dvd quality widescreen episodes, and they only take up 30% of the 700MB disc. So i tried to do the third episode, which is high quality while not exactly dvd quality. Now this third episode, and all the ones like it (44 of them) are coming up as barely being abel to fit onto one disc. Now i tried some other episodes of other series that i have, and this seems to be an isolated problem. What could possibly be the reason for this one group of encoded videos to go to vcd in such a large file? Is there nothing i can do? Its not just a large increase in file size, its three times the size than the others. I dont want to lose lots of quality and i dont think lowering the bitrate will give me 1/3 of the size. any ideas? Thanks.
avi to VCD some files bigger than others?
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VCD has a fixed bitrate, so in theory:
1. Don't lower the bitrate or your VCD will not be compliant
2. The filesize is a direct derivative of your movie length. Basically, 1min=~10MB. Can you open your VCD (MPEG1) files in media player and see what length it does report?
What process do you use to convert your AVI files?"on the north side of 'wild-cat peak' the 'snow squaws' shake their winter blankets and bring forth a chill which rides the wind with goad and spur, hurling with an icy hand rime, and frost upon a dreamy land musing in the lap of Spring" -
well it turns out that my files have some audio encode that TMPGEnc cant deal with. Ive tried some others and they dont work either. So not only did they turn out huge but there was no audio.Comment
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To sethifergp
The problematic .AVIs most likely contain Variable Bitrate ("VBR") .MP3 audiostreams, which TMPGEnc cannot properly interpret.
Converting .AVIs with VBR-MP3 Audio for use with TMPGEnc
Using VirtualDubMOD to Convert "VBR" .MP3 to Uncompressed .WAV
1) Load the .AVI file into VirtualDubMOD (a different program than the standard VirtualDub)
2) From the "Video" dropdown menu, select "Direct Stream Copy"
3) From the "Streams" dropdown menu, select "Stream List" - and rightclick on the audio stream, then select "Full Processing Mode" - then click on "OK"
4) From the "File" dropdown menu, save with a new filenameComment
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thanks man, i will try that out as soon as i can. And since you cant change the bitrate i guess im stuck with .avis that take up just a few more MBs than a 700 mb cd-r, or is there another way to make them smaller aside from changing the bitrate.Comment
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i guess im stuck with .avis that take up just a few more MBs than a 700 mb cd-r
is there another way to make them smaller"on the north side of 'wild-cat peak' the 'snow squaws' shake their winter blankets and bring forth a chill which rides the wind with goad and spur, hurling with an icy hand rime, and frost upon a dreamy land musing in the lap of Spring"Comment
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