logo Sign In

HyperYagami

User Group
Members
Join date
3-Jan-2006
Last activity
12-Jan-2006
Posts
3

Post History

Post
#168734
Topic
.: Citizen's NTSC DVD / PAL DVD / XviD project :. (Released)
Time
Originally posted by: Karyudo
Converting to NTSC isn't all that tough, either, since that 25fps was originally 24fps. AviSynth will let you call it 23.976fps

So...that also means the PAL and NTSC releases have different time durations (in terms of # of second) since the framecounts are the same (I didn't get the NTSC release so can't tell myself...)? I guess I'm not sure what exactly AVISynth does in this case...playing the 23.976fps materal in 25fps (i.e., the PAL release has shorter duration) or actually converting the material from 23.976fps to 25fps (i.e., some frame insertions and blendings involved)?

Originally posted by: Karyudo
the audio from any NTSC edition is already timed to match. Not magic; just a lot of fiddling around.


Hum...you just reminded me that the audio was ripped from the NTSC edition...so the NTSC and PAL releases *must* have the same time duration then?
Post
#168709
Topic
.: Citizen's NTSC DVD / PAL DVD / XviD project :. (Released)
Time
Hi all,

Thanks Citizen for all the hard work!

I have a techincal question...since the source itself it's PAL, how it that possible to capture it under NTSC? I have done some NTSC analog video capturing myself and I know in terms of resolution or resolution there's no problem. However, I don't understand how it's possible to capture 25fps materal in 23.976fps? Or you're capturing straight to 29.97fps?

Thanks!