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  1. Hello there, I have a few questions that hopefully somebody could answer for me...

    1. Is it possible to fix glitches in movies where the all of the sudden the video becomes very blocky and sometimes the blocks stretch. These glitches happen a couple times during some of my movies, and sometimes I can manage to fix them with divfix but sometimes I can't, is there any other way? (this is one of my most important questions!)

    2. Is there any way to fix the interlacing problems I encounter in some of my movies? (like when there are scanlines when movement occurs)

    3. Sometimes in some of my movies, rarely, there will be a movie that at some point in the movie the audio becomes out of sync with the video. Most of the audio is in sync, but part of it is not, is there any way to get that audio in sync with the rest of the movie?

    4. On a few movies, all I see is a blank purple or black and white screen that flickers (the purple one doesn't flicker) i hear audio, but see no video. GSpot says I have the codecs??? I tried reinstaling the codecs, didn't help? Any ideas?

    Thanks for any help that could be given to me here!
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  2. Member
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    Use virtualdub mp3 freeze to scan your avis for bad frames and cut them out . That is probably the cause of your sync problems too.
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  3. 1. Run it thru vdub-mp3 and remove the glitchy parts.
    2. I have no idea.
    3. Separate audio and video in vdub and resync manually, or use a program such as sony soundforge to remove either a bit of video, or a bit of audio to resync.
    Cheers, Jim
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  4. Will doing that cut part of my movie out? Oh yeah and on the two videos that have the sync problems, there are no glitchy parts, could there still be bad frames causing it even though there are no visual disturbance?
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    Yes but it may only be a few seconds it depends on how many badframes there are.
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  6. is there no way to just fix the frames instead of deleting them? it'll look like crap if it skips a section of video...
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    you can but it requires a very lengthy multi-program ordeal to fix. You have to separate the audio using virtualdub. Reencode the video using virtualdub. Take the wav file generated by virtualdub when you separated the audio. Then use TMPGenc to reunite the audio and video in either a videocd or supervideocd. This process works for me, but like i said, it is time consuming.
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  8. At (presumably) 29.97fps, you aren't even going to notice 5 or 6 missing frames here and there.
    Separating and rejoining audio and video is not really going to fix any frames, it's simply taking more risk of having sync trouble.

    #4) Are you positive these are actual movies, and NOT P2P downloaded junk?
    Cheers, Jim
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    reboot, you are talking out of your arse. It worked for me, and if done correctly it will work for people. I suggest you try it, before you start mouting off. I had to do it on two different movies, and it worked each time.
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  10. Wait a sec... rencoding in VirtualDub would make it into an avi... how the hell could you load it into TMPGEnc and remux as a VCD/SVCD???? Do you encode in VDub as YMPEG or something?
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    First you reencode the avi(from xvid to like divx 5.1.1). That output file is also an avi. When you reencode in vdub(select no audio). Then take the reencoded avi and the wav file you made when you extracted the audio the first time around and load them into TMPGenc and encode to vcd or svcd. This process has worked for me twice, but it is time consuming. I do this on a 800mhz Amd duron(512 MB SDRAM)40gig and 80gig system(The very first that I built)(I have now built 5 computers.) The encoding process if I remember was an hour for the wav. An hour and a half for the reencoded avi, and 3 hours for the vcd(1.5 hours for each part) Like I said before, it is time consuming, but it works as it has twice.
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  12. what if you don't want it to be an svcd or vcd and you want it to stay divx or xvid...
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    don't know. that was the only way i could get it to work
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  14. Member
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    Originally Posted by deepfriedluigi
    is there no way to just fix the frames instead of deleting them? it'll look like crap if it skips a section of video...
    Considering the source of your files , it a bit much to expect perfect files to work with.

    Reencoding to another AVI can only decrease quality . Cutting out the badframes is the way to go.

    If there are too many badframes , delete the file and get on with something else.
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