VideoHelp Forum




+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 18 of 18
  1. anybody know what sort of size a 680 meg avi file will be after conversion to a vcd mpeg1 file.

    thanx for any help
    Quote Quote  
  2. Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2001
    Location
    Berlin, Germany
    Search Comp PM
    It depends on the playing time of the avi.

    <font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: Truman on 2001-10-03 07:05:40 ]</font>
    Quote Quote  
  3. its about 1hr and 50 mins
    Quote Quote  
  4. Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2001
    Location
    United States
    Search Comp PM
    I say closer to 3 minutes- as 1000 mg avi equals 4.5 minutes;680 mg would be 2/3 of that or approximately 3 minutes?
    Quote Quote  
  5. Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2001
    Location
    Berlin, Germany
    Search Comp PM
    110 minutes encoded as VCD compliant MPEG-1 is about 1100MB.
    1 minute @ 1150+224kbps=10MB
    Quote Quote  
  6. so 1100meg is about 1 1/2 disks then. how will i be able to split the film then to go onto both disks.

    thanx for your help. I am newbie to VCD burning.
    Quote Quote  
  7. Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2001
    Location
    england
    Search PM
    use the program virtualdub it will split your avi file. its simple ok
    Quote Quote  
  8. will it split so it fits exactly on a 74min disk?
    Quote Quote  
  9. also, will i split the disk when its an AVI or after converting to MPEG
    Quote Quote  
  10. Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2000
    Location
    Northern Virginia
    Search Comp PM
    AND, if you'd like to experiment a little, try some non-VCD-standard settings, such as CQ_VBR 0-1150 quality 50, and audio of 44.1khz and 64kbps. you'll find you can squeeze the same movie into a much smaller sized mpeg. depends on what your final objective is, though, strict compliance or one disc, "playable" (depends on your player, PC or standalone) movies.

    as a reference, i just encoded the 93 minute movie "Double Take", 352x240, CQ_VBR 0-1350, audio 44.1khz/64kbps, 29.97fps, to a 768 Mbyte MPEG file, which fit/burned on one 80 min disc and plays flawlessly on my JVC standalone. looks better than a standard 1150 VCD, too!
    Quote Quote  
  11. mark...
    it's so much easier to split/cut the avi first, then afterwards as mpg. use virtualdub to cut into two halves, then encode both halves individually. could also create a batch/project if you're using tmpgenc to encode. cue it up walk away , come back a few hours after and it'd be ready to burn.

    ztr
    Quote Quote  
  12. thanx guys for all your help. i'm just converting it to MPEG, and when I was previewing the file in TMPGEnc, I didnt hear no sound, but on reading the help, that is correct. i am only supposed to view video....lol
    anyway, converting to MPEG, and will be ready in 7 hours, so will report back then.
    once again, thanx to all for the help
    Cheers
    Quote Quote  
  13. Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2000
    Location
    Northern Virginia
    Search Comp PM
    <TABLE BORDER=0 ALIGN=CENTER WIDTH=85%><TR><TD><font size=-1>Quote:</font><HR size=1 color=black></TD></TR><TR><TD><FONT SIZE=-1><BLOCKQUOTE>
    On 2001-10-03 09:52:58, El_Mero_Zooter wrote:
    mark...
    it's so much easier to split/cut the avi first,
    </BLOCKQUOTE></FONT></TD></TR><TR><TD><HR size=1 color=black></TD></TR></TABLE>

    i disagree - i think it is most easiest to feed the whole avi to tmpgenc and, using the source range filter, batch encode each half to separate MPEGs.
    Quote Quote  
  14. ok, will it be possible to split it into 2 MPEG files after conversion?
    Quote Quote  
  15. Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2000
    Location
    Northern Virginia
    Search Comp PM
    that's the beauty of it, you encode the first half of the movie to one mpeg, then the other half of the movie to another mpeg. when completed, you've already got two mpegs, split at exactly the frame you designate.
    Quote Quote  
  16. ok, but can i split the entire MPEG after its been encoded?
    Quote Quote  
  17. Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2001
    Location
    Cherry Hill, NJ
    Search PM
    Yes, you can. Use TMPGEnc, file->Mpeg tools, Merge & cut.
    Quote Quote  



Similar Threads

Visit our sponsor! Try DVDFab and backup Blu-rays!