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  1. Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2003
    Location
    Middle of Tornado Alley
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    I'm having a small problem with an mpeg2 and Adobe Premiere version 6.0

    I have a Public Domain mpeg about radioactive fallout I got from www.archive.org that I am trying to import into Premiere. It's a valid Mpeg2, 640x480, I have previewed it in Windows Media Player. When I try to import it, I get an error message that says:

    Unable to open that file
    File was recorded at an unsupported rate. Supported rates are 11kHz, 22 kHz, 32kHz, 44kHz, and 48kHz.

    So the mpeg has some funky audio rate, and I haven't been able to find what the rate is. I wanted to know if there is any way to change the audio rate for the clip, or if there is a program (particularly if it's freeware or shareware) that will let me fix this. I really would like to use this clip for a project I'm working on...it's too comical to discard.
    "I argue very well. Ask any of my remaining friends. I can win an argument on any topic, against any opponent. People know this, and steer clear of me at parties. Often, as a sign of their great respect, they don't even invite me."
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  2. Member DVO's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2002
    Location
    Sweden
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    Try Virtual dub w/the MPEG-2 extra plugin.

    It allow you to convert MPEG-2 to avi for editing. I used it to convert a DVD-file i had, converting it to DV w/Panasonic DV codec. Then reencode it w/Premire 6.5 or TMPEGEnc.
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  3. Member dcsos's Avatar
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    Jan 2003
    Location
    Y No Werk (anagram)
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    If its just the audio component use a program other than PREMIERE to DEMUX the AUDIO and deal with the sound in a seperate step befor import to Premiere.
    (I use MPEG2VCR by Womble for demuxing)
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  4. Originally Posted by dcsos
    If its just the audio component use a program other than PREMIERE to DEMUX the AUDIO and deal with the sound in a seperate step befor import to Premiere.
    (I use MPEG2VCR by Womble for demuxing)
    Agreed. My personal suggestion is Tmpgenc for de-muxing. The convert the mp2 audio (I assume it is mp2) to wav, and resample at the same time, with BeSweet. Then import sperateley into Premiere.
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