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I have downloaded TMPGEnc latest version. And when I try to make a vcd from avi-file the vcd (mpg-file) gets no sound. I'm new to this, can someone help me!?
I was so intrigued by these posts that I just finished creating and burning a VCD with 48,000Hz audio (at 224Kbps). It plays perfectly (audio and video) both on a PC and on a standalone DVD player. Therefore, I don't think the 48,000Hz is the problem.
Perhaps you, bobbo, inadvertently selected "Video only" when creating the MPEG1-VideoCD file.
By the way, abdul, you can far more simply change the audio rate from within TMPGEnc: Click on the "Setting" radio button, then clcik on the "Audio" tab and simply change the sampling rate ;>}
You know that i'm always looking foreward to learn something new, but this little experiment of yours leaves me only more confused.
I wouldn't suggest this changing of samplerate if i didn't found out the hard way that it took care of a problem (and besides i don't like to give advise that isn't of any use -that would be a wast of everbodys time)
But now that you have proven that the samplingrate is of no factor (and of course i'm hardheaded enough to also check it -and you're right ) it leaves me wondering why it did solve the problem in another case
And i'm not the only one i might add, i've read numerous times that people were helped by changing the samplerate.
By the way, abdul, you can far more simply change the audio rate from within TMPGEnc: Click on the "Setting" radio button, then clcik on the "Audio" tab and simply change the sampling rate ;>}
There isn't any use for this now is there, because in my little experiment i:
Load an avi with 48.00Hz into TMPGEnc
Load the template VideoCD [PAL].mcf
And when i load the mpg into VDub and look at file info it says that the audio is sampled with 44kHz so this means TMPGEnc has automatically converted it
In conclusion: bobbo's problem isn't solved and i'm a desillusion richer
But it still leaves me with the quetion WHY in some cases it helps to convert to 44.100Hz first (even when TMPGEnc does it automatically)
and futher more : "What is the (dis)advantage of a 48.000Hz samplingrate over a 44.100Hz samplingrate"
The solution Abdul came up with works perfectly! I havn´t tried any other sugestions but i´ll stick to this one!
My movies still wount get any sound if I dont make a separate audiofile!
I'm glad it did Bobbo, one less problem, glad i could help
Now for my conception:
It is getting stanger all the time
You know i did what Setarip also did and successfully loaded a 48.000Hz into TMPGEnc and it worked
(to be honest this was a version i did some fiddling on -i added subtitles to the movie- and don't know what else i changed in the proces -not the samplingrate)
But now after bobbo's reply i went futher and took the original avi (the one without subtitles) and also tried to do the same
Suprise ..........................
Then i unlocked the template and changed 44.100 into 48.000Hz and then it will work
So i don't know why the first time (2 posts back) it DID work, but i'm kind of glad that the 48.000Hz is giving problems (in the standard templates that is), so i can keep on giving this advise
The sad part is that is don't understand the WHY of this all and i'm kind of anxious to know why TMPGEnc does what is does and when.
"knowing" you, Setarip, through all your posts, this must also be eating you; so if you have any good explainations, or plausible ones , feel free to enlighten me.
Unfortunately, for this situation, I have no additional insight to offer - primarily because I don't use the templates when using TMPGEnc. Therefore, when I created a 48,000 audio rate VCD, the rate remains at 48,000 for the finished VCD (no automatic conversion to 44,100, that you indicated occurs when using the template).
The only disadvantage that I've seen, is that some standalone players, while handling DVDs with 48K sound, have problems handling VCDs with that sound format - some won't play them at all, while others "stutter and stammer"...
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