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ADigitalMan's Guide to MPEG2/AC3 Editing — Page 5
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Sorry about the delay but I had a crazy week with zero time to dedicate to my project.
I got back to it at the beginning of the afternoon but somehow I'm stuck and I just can't separate the 2 streams in Womble.
They are separated in the timeline though. Following your advice, I muted one of them in the timeline then went to export. I got 2 files.
I then muted the other one and de-muted the first one, went to export, changed the names, ended up with another 2 files.
Here is the catch : Both my AC3 files are a mix of my 2 tracks ??!!?.
Also, it is strange but it is seems that in Womble if I want to export to 2 separate files (1 MPEG and 1 AC3), I have to read 'Multiplexed' in the General Tab. If I can read 'Separate' then I'm going to get 1 file (Audio+Video).
I know I'm only one step away from what I want but I just spent 2 full hours trying to play with the options without any good results.
I guess I need some detailed steps to succeed...
Any thoughts ?
No Mister Bond I expect you to DIE !
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I am the BASF of the film community. I don’t make the films you watch. I make the films you watch better.
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Do I have to physically REMOVE one of the track from the timeline for it to work ?
No Mister Bond I expect you to DIE !
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I am the BASF of the film community. I don’t make the films you watch. I make the films you watch better.
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Here is the trick : when muting one of the soundtracks for an export in Womble, do not select the Mute option from the side of the timeline (the Mike button or the Violin button), as the mute is only operational for replaying while editing.
In order to mute a track for an export, you have to do a right-click on the track in the timeline, then select Audio, then Mute.
Thanks again for your patience and precious advice ADM, maybe you want to edit the page 1 of your guide to add this tidbit of info.
I'm now onto DVD Lab Pro. I somehow managed to get a very crude DVD last time around but I might ask you for more help along the way.
In any case, a million thanks !
No Mister Bond I expect you to DIE !
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I am the BASF of the film community. I don’t make the films you watch. I make the films you watch better.
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I managed to build a very simple 1-screen menu gathering all the small features like language selection, and I also made good use of the auto-chapter feature of DVD Lab Pro 2.
After the burn + thorough testing on my stand-alone player, it has no bug and the audio is now fixed...
My next project will involve a dual-layered NTSC DVD on which I intend to add a language that wasn't featured on the original release.
I wonder how hard it is to rip the original menu structure, add the language, and reconstruct it anew ?
Any tips for the newbie, ADM ?
No Mister Bond I expect you to DIE !
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I usually recreate my menus from scratch.
I am the BASF of the film community. I don’t make the films you watch. I make the films you watch better.
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I'm needing to find the bit-rate and audio/video codec for a mystery file here at work. Thanks.
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The end result will show you each of the streams, their file size, framerate, pulldown ratio, time and average bitrate.
DVD Lab Pro will also tell you your total bitrate for a movie with all the video and audio streams you've added so you can be sure not to exceeed the 9800 max. (It took me a long time to realize this, but now it's useful when I'm working with PCM tracks).
I am the BASF of the film community. I don’t make the films you watch. I make the films you watch better.
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I found an MPEG-2 analyzer called "G Spot" at the site you recommended, and it's really cool, though I'm concerned some about its accuracy as I am using it at work. Have you used this software before?
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I am the BASF of the film community. I don’t make the films you watch. I make the films you watch better.
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If you have two anamorphic films (1.85:1 & 2.40:1) can those be edited together to the same aspect ratio with some conversion method?
Secondly, have any of you heard of/used this open source editing program?
Jahshaka
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I am the BASF of the film community. I don’t make the films you watch. I make the films you watch better.
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I have another problem though
The video is fine but the audio will not sync up with the video and is acutally a couple mins shorter than the video. I didnt split the files.
First I ripped the video with the audio track (using the demux method) Then I tried just ripping the audio track and I was still having the same problem. I dont know what Im doing wrong.
Edit: I figured it out
"The Empire can't stop us now..now its our turn" -Luke-
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"The Empire can't stop us now..now its our turn" -Luke-
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Visit my Webcomic! Nonstop Pop
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OR you can just demux it straight from disc using DVD Decrypter in IFO mode (as opposed to File mode, which rips the VOBs straight to disc).
I am the BASF of the film community. I don’t make the films you watch. I make the films you watch better.
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I'm just now getting into using Vegas for this. For the first time a couple of days ago I came up with a process for this:
1) Export just the two shots you want to crossfade to an M2V file.
2) Load the clip into VirtualDubMod and save as an uncompressed AVI.
3) Open the AVI in Vegas and do what you want with it. Save as another AVI.
4) Encode back to M2V using TMPGEnc.
5) Load the new M2V into your Womble project.
The results are GORGEOUS. I'll likely do this from now on, and will use this method to do the wipes in SW whenever they eventually happen in Hi-Def.
I am the BASF of the film community. I don’t make the films you watch. I make the films you watch better.
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I am the BASF of the film community. I don’t make the films you watch. I make the films you watch better.