DivX 5.0.5 - Settings for multi-pass and VirtualDUB?

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  • rolandschweiger
    Junior Member
    Junior Member
    • Jan 2002
    • 6

    DivX 5.0.5 - Settings for multi-pass and VirtualDUB?

    Hi everyone,
    i have recently installed DivX 5.0.5
    and i am using it to convert my movies from my
    SONY Mini DV Camera to DivX.
    The camera is PAL 720 * 576
    and as i want good quality at low bitrates, i want to use multi pass.

    Unfortunately i did not find an exact description of how ecactly to use the multi pass feature.

    I tried
    "original-first pass", then "origina-second pass-first" and finally
    "original-secondpass-2nd".

    At the first 2 stages with VirtualDUB, i left the audio processing out
    and only at the final stage, i included audio conversion to MPEG3.

    However, this method is very slow and i am wondering if there are better ways of doing this - for example using the preset profile for "home theatre".

    Hope someone has a good solution or an exact description of how to use the 5.0.5 codec correctly ?

    greetings

    Roland Schweiger
  • Jeff Mirage
    Junior Member
    Junior Member
    • Apr 2003
    • 39

    #2
    Possibly Solution

    To use the multipass function in VirtualDub with DivX 5.0.5, try "Multipass - 1st pass" and when it`s finished run "Multipass - nth Pass"..

    Hope its useful, at least it works for me

    Comment

    • rolandschweiger
      Junior Member
      Junior Member
      • Jan 2002
      • 6

      #3
      when i use first-pass / nth pass,
      is it definately ok to leave the audio out during first pass,
      and to keep the same names for the log file ?
      (the codec will ask "the log file already exists, overwrite?)

      Comment

      • Jeff Mirage
        Junior Member
        Junior Member
        • Apr 2003
        • 39

        #4
        I allways encode the audio during the first pass so I can`t help you there..
        And I never had any problems with the log file so can`t help you there eighter...

        Ok this wasen`t much help but thought I had to reply..

        Comment

        • SKD_Tech
          Lord of Digital Video
          Lord of Digital Video
          • Jan 2003
          • 1512

          #5
          You can leave the audio out it doesn't matter when you encode and mix that.

          The log it IS ok for it to overwrite

          Comment

          • scottws
            Junior Member
            Junior Member
            • May 2003
            • 27

            #6
            Is there any advantage to 3-pass encoding? If so, how do I do it? I'm actually running a 3-pass batch at home now in VirtualDub, but I just kind of guessed.

            I took a VFAPI AVI and set the DivX codec to Multipass, 1st pass, full processing. No audio. Save job.

            Then I did Multipass, nth pass, full processing. No audio. Save job.

            Then I did Multipass, nth pass, full processing. WAV audio (MP3 encoded Riff-WAV), direct stream. Save job.

            Run jobs.

            Is that right?
            Last edited by scottws; 6 Jun 2003, 08:06 AM.

            Comment

            • Jeff Mirage
              Junior Member
              Junior Member
              • Apr 2003
              • 39

              #7
              It sure sounds right, I guess it`s finished now? How did it go?

              I have never used 3 passes, since two passes seems to produce an ok quality... (So why waste time on a third one???)

              Comment

              • scottws
                Junior Member
                Junior Member
                • May 2003
                • 27

                #8
                I don't know. I messed something up so I scrapped it.

                For some reason, I can't get the audio to sync with the video.

                I followed this guide.

                It worked fine for me for two other movies, but this certain one I'm doing now just will not sync up. It starts out in sync, but by the end of the 89 minute video, it's several seconds off.

                I had changed keyframes from the default 300 frames/keyframe to 24 frames/keyframe, so I could split it up into 9 sections easier. Would that have something to do with it?

                Oh, and it can't be my PC:

                Athlon XP 2400+ @2145Mhz
                EPoX 8K5A2+ (KT333) @284Mhz
                VisionTek GeForce 3
                768MB Corsair XMS PC2700 CAS2.0 all low latency settings
                2 40MB Maxtor 7200RPM ATA133 drives in RAID 0
                Sound Blaster Audigy Gamer
                LiteOn LTR-40125S CD-R/RW 40x12x48
                JLMS (LiteOn/JVC) XJ-HD166S DVD/CD-ROM 16x48
                Last edited by scottws; 10 Jun 2003, 01:55 PM.

                Comment

                • SKD_Tech
                  Lord of Digital Video
                  Lord of Digital Video
                  • Jan 2003
                  • 1512

                  #9
                  That's a damn fast computer you got there it being 2145GHZ and all but I know what you meant to say

                  Comment

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