I’m having major issues with certain avi files; they seem to be Xivid and H.264/MKV files. I’ll start with the playback or lack thereof of some DVD’s I burn to play on my stand alone player that’s connected to my TV . Most of these files play fine on my computer with DivX Plus and WMP but once I burn them to a DVD (as avi files) only half of the picture shows, the bottom half of the screen is the garbled background the DVD player shows when there isn’t a disk in it. Now some of these files have been converted from Xvid or MKV to Avi because of the problem with the Divx player not playing some Xvid files. I don’t think this factors in though because some of them played fine before I burned them. I’ll go into the Divx player problem in another post.
I tried burning at the slowest speed, converting, and asking (in a post) if anyone else had this problem with the same file ( they didn’t) the only thing I ever got to work was converting to a DVD (VOB) file. I’m thinking it may be something to do with the output resolution (screen size) but I have noticed that files that played fine on the DVD player hooked to my flat screen have been of various sizes. I use Spamsoft for most of my conversions, but I have also tried using the Divx converter, and VDub but with VDub I have had a 1gb file become 90.1 gb’s! but that’s a whole other story, if ya can’t tell I’m wayyyy new at this stuff. I hope this is enough information, thanks for any advice you may have to get me on track. Here is the format info on one of the files that when burned and played on my stand alone shows only half a screen ( the tv is set on widescreen)
Format: Divx 6.9.2 YV12 Decoder DX50
I also get this audio error message on some of the files, but it really hasn’t been an issue..yet!
AVI: Variable bitrate (VBR) audio detected. VBR audio in AVI is non-standard and you may encounter sync errors up to 0ms when attempting to extract WAV files or playing in some players. If this is a problem, use Full Processing mode is recommended to decompress or recompress the audio. (This warning can be disabled in Options, Preferences,
AVI. bitrate: 128.0 ± 0.0 kbps)
SYS Info.
Microsoft Windows XP Service Pack 3 (5.01.2600)
DirectX: 9.0c
CPU name: Intel(R) Pentium(R) 4 CPU 3.00GHz
CPU speed: 3000MHz
Memory: 2047MB
Screen size: 1152x864 (32bits)
Video card: RADEON X300/X550 Series, 128MB
Video driver: ati2dvag.dll (version: 6.14.10.6571)
Audio card: Realtek HD Audio rear output
I tried burning at the slowest speed, converting, and asking (in a post) if anyone else had this problem with the same file ( they didn’t) the only thing I ever got to work was converting to a DVD (VOB) file. I’m thinking it may be something to do with the output resolution (screen size) but I have noticed that files that played fine on the DVD player hooked to my flat screen have been of various sizes. I use Spamsoft for most of my conversions, but I have also tried using the Divx converter, and VDub but with VDub I have had a 1gb file become 90.1 gb’s! but that’s a whole other story, if ya can’t tell I’m wayyyy new at this stuff. I hope this is enough information, thanks for any advice you may have to get me on track. Here is the format info on one of the files that when burned and played on my stand alone shows only half a screen ( the tv is set on widescreen)
Format: Divx 6.9.2 YV12 Decoder DX50
I also get this audio error message on some of the files, but it really hasn’t been an issue..yet!
AVI: Variable bitrate (VBR) audio detected. VBR audio in AVI is non-standard and you may encounter sync errors up to 0ms when attempting to extract WAV files or playing in some players. If this is a problem, use Full Processing mode is recommended to decompress or recompress the audio. (This warning can be disabled in Options, Preferences,
AVI. bitrate: 128.0 ± 0.0 kbps)
SYS Info.
Microsoft Windows XP Service Pack 3 (5.01.2600)
DirectX: 9.0c
CPU name: Intel(R) Pentium(R) 4 CPU 3.00GHz
CPU speed: 3000MHz
Memory: 2047MB
Screen size: 1152x864 (32bits)
Video card: RADEON X300/X550 Series, 128MB
Video driver: ati2dvag.dll (version: 6.14.10.6571)
Audio card: Realtek HD Audio rear output
Comment