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| uk.tech.digital-tv (Digital TV - General) (uk.tech.digital-tv) Discussion of all matters technical in origin related to the reception of digital television transmissions, be they via satellite, terrestrial or cable. Advertising is forbidden, with no exceptions. |
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"DK" wrote Would it be better to PVAstrumento the original 2.5GB file from hauppage before I split it ? Yes, Yes, Yes! Use the latest version of PVAS - v.2.0.30 - some recent versions have difficulty handling some Freeview streams - select "make PS" and use all the default settings except two: select a Packet Size of 2048 Bytes, and, under the "Video" tab, select "do long scans over (200) sequences", changing the value to *500*. I too have, in the past, experimented with Nanoedit, and also found problems with large files, even under WinXP/NTFS. Don't know of a cure - sorry. Anyone achieved decent DIVX results with hauppage MPEGS of 2-2.5gb in size ?? and thus, got any suggestions ?? The Divx 5 codec seems quite nice. Use it with Vidomi. IIRC, Vidomi allows you to "select source range", ie trim your files.Thus, you might be able to dispense with Nanoedit.Why not take a look at TMPGEnc. This has a useful cut/trim tool. www.divx.com www.vidomi.com Good Luck, Ron. |
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#2
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Mmm, further messing revealed that even PVAstrumento produced a file
with sound out of synch with the video!! Downloaded TMPGEnc and it also produced out of synch sound. Downloaded the demo of Dr Divx v1.02 from divx and finally, something that works perfectly. It accepts the unaltered file from Hauppage, allows me to trim the file, and produces a decent quality, small file with the audio perfectly in synch!! "Ronald Marlowe" wrote in message ... "DK" wrote Would it be better to PVAstrumento the original 2.5GB file from hauppage before I split it ? Yes, Yes, Yes! Use the latest version of PVAS - v.2.0.30 - some recent versions have difficulty handling some Freeview streams - select "make PS" and use all the default settings except two: select a Packet Size of 2048 Bytes, and, under the "Video" tab, select "do long scans over (200) sequences", changing the value to *500*. I too have, in the past, experimented with Nanoedit, and also found problems with large files, even under WinXP/NTFS. Don't know of a cure - sorry. Anyone achieved decent DIVX results with hauppage MPEGS of 2-2.5gb in size ?? and thus, got any suggestions ?? The Divx 5 codec seems quite nice. Use it with Vidomi. IIRC, Vidomi allows you to "select source range", ie trim your files.Thus, you might be able to dispense with Nanoedit.Why not take a look at TMPGEnc. This has a useful cut/trim tool. www.divx.com www.vidomi.com Good Luck, Ron. |
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#3
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"DK" wrote Downloaded the demo of Dr Divx v1.02 from divx and finally, something that works perfectly. It accepts the unaltered file from Hauppage, allows me to trim the file, and produces a decent quality, small file with the audio perfectly in synch!! Good! Forgot to mention something called "nanofix" - a small utility produced by the nanoedit people that is intended to sort out errors in the mpeg headers, prior to further processing. Can't remember where it's located - try Googling. I have sometimes found that PVAS can cause the very synch problems that it is intended to fix when it is working on Hauppauge (Nova-t) files. My usual process is: record with Nebula DigiTv; run through PVAStrumento; perhaps edit with ULead Video Studio 7; cut/trim, etc with TMPGEnc DVD Author; Author and burn to DVD with same. Luckily I *always* get discs that retain perfect a/v sync this way. I've found that it is often necessary to omit the PVAS stage when using Nova-t recordings in order to retain sync. Unfortunately, without PVAS-ing, TMPGEnc DVD Author will not accept the file, making it necessary to submit to a slow, time-consuming transcode to DVD-format. Why not e-mail PVAS's author? He is, at present, beta-testing his latest version and might be very pleased to hear about your difficulties.I'm sure that many people find PVAS a boon - it more often than not "firms up" DVB recordings so successfully that further processing becomes predictable and reliable. Perhaps the man could include a fix to do the same for HP pvr 250 files? Ron. |
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