OK, I'll go over what I've already done and address the issue at the end.
TMPGEnc was used to pull an ac3 and m2v from a VOB on my hard drive.
I go to File->MPEG Tools and choose Simple Multiplex.
I choose MPEG-2 (VBR) out of the drop list.
I don't need the audio so I rename the video file to prevent automatic association.
The .mpg path defaults to same folder.
I click run.
The encoding proceeds.
The error '165958 s packets cause buffer underflow. The MPeg file might cause error when it played.' appears.
I wanted to ignore this but when I play the video back in Windows Media Player, there are several 'fast forward' glitches in the footage. Looks like it's skipping frames or something. It levels out but I can't just ignore the glitches.
Before we continue. I've already tried it with audio using the .ac3 file. Same error. Secondly, I've already tried to increase the priority
on the Directshow Multimedia File Reader so I can convert the audio to mp2. Still can't import the audio. Not an issue though, I don't need it.
Using Windows XP on a new Acer Aspire laptop. 512 Megs RAM.
What next?
Lost in video land.
PB
TMPGEnc was used to pull an ac3 and m2v from a VOB on my hard drive.
I go to File->MPEG Tools and choose Simple Multiplex.
I choose MPEG-2 (VBR) out of the drop list.
I don't need the audio so I rename the video file to prevent automatic association.
The .mpg path defaults to same folder.
I click run.
The encoding proceeds.
The error '165958 s packets cause buffer underflow. The MPeg file might cause error when it played.' appears.
I wanted to ignore this but when I play the video back in Windows Media Player, there are several 'fast forward' glitches in the footage. Looks like it's skipping frames or something. It levels out but I can't just ignore the glitches.
Before we continue. I've already tried it with audio using the .ac3 file. Same error. Secondly, I've already tried to increase the priority
on the Directshow Multimedia File Reader so I can convert the audio to mp2. Still can't import the audio. Not an issue though, I don't need it.
Using Windows XP on a new Acer Aspire laptop. 512 Megs RAM.
What next?
Lost in video land.
PB
Comment