Hi all,
I just bought a Sony DV-cam and I want to make CDs playable on regular DVD-players. I use Adobe Premiere 6.5 and I did some tests concerning formats and I found a strange difference between VCD and SVCD. The object was a fast flying seagull and some nice almost calm water.
With VCD the general qualiry was too low but the seagull was pretty OK when in motion. The SVCD gave much better overall quality, the water looked very nice but the seagull in motion was kind of pixelated and highlighted. What did I do wrong? Is there a web site which has the most general settings for a good output? As for now I can't use VCD nor SVCD... It's okay for me to get abut 30-40 minutes on a CD. And, I'm not gonna buy a DVD-burner...
Thankx,
/Mat
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Use CVD settings, which is Half D1 MPEG2 interlaced with 44.1hz audio.
That should do quite well for you.
Not VCD, XVCD or SVCD ... bu CVD (Chinese Video Disc ... which is like SVCD).Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
Originally Posted by lordsmurf
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Upping the bitrate and/or using two pass VBR might fix the problem. What bitrate did you use?
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CVD is just as compatible as SVCD, maybe even moreso since it has Half D1 as base video.
CVD is 352x480 (Half D1) VBR 2520 interlaced with 44.1hz stereo MP2 audio
SVCD is 480x480 VBR 2520 interlaced with 44.1hz stereo MP2 audio.
I bet you're not interlacing. Or using too low bitrate. Or using CBR bitrate.Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
Originally Posted by teegee420
A friend of mie did a pretty perfect avi with moviemaker...pity I dont use XP (98ME).
Thanx for all your tips btw. I've learned a lot this evening.
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Originally Posted by matknu
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Load your final project to Virualdub and minnor filter it, just for those details we don't see but the encoder do see.
I suggest you the typical combo for filtering: Static Noise Reduction 6 / Dynamic Noise Reduction 8, Sharpness 4.
Also resize your source to 352 x 480 (for NTSC) and frameserve to TMPGenc Plus.
There, encode to CVD with CBR 2520 (352 x 480 framesize, audio 129Kb/s with 44100khz).
Burn your final mpeg 2 as non standard SVCD with NERO
This is the best you can do with your source for CD based formats.
CVD is about same compatible with SVCD, less compatible compared to VCD and it has a benefit: Later, you can convert it direct to DVD, without the need of re-encoding. -
Originally Posted by SatStorm
I read what you say but why don't I get the result I want from Premiere? It's an expensive software even if 6.5 isn't the newest one. It should do the trick or am I out cycling!?!?!? I re-tried vcd and svcd today and the motion pixelation (or blocking) was of course there in the scvd format...with CBR 2520. I maxed the bitrate with no success.
I will try the way you described so excellent but for me it seems like going over the stream to get water... Why is there not a "save for movie CD" option which makes the captured DV movie end up on a regular CD, untouched apart from the compression!?
/Mats
P.S. MY DVD-player that I have connected to my TV plays all sort of weird data formats such as avi, dix, xvid...unfortunately it's bad at playing real dvd's bought in a shop. 2 of 5 works for me.... -
The reason programs like virtualdub exist, and the reason users made filters, is because the commercial solutions doens't always work for us, the enthusiasts.
Converting home movies and DV to CD based media, needs advance steps which automatic solutions fail to do the best possible way. -
Originally Posted by SatStorm
I don't have an extremely large HD so I can't keep all of my movies uncompressed on the HD. Instead my original idea was to convert all of the tapes (normal Sony 60 minutes) to single files about one or two GB and then use these files in Premiere to make the finished movies.
/Mats -
The Huffy codec is lossless, meaning you loss no quality by compressing with it. That's why you output is so much larger. You did nothing wrong
It's the preferred format for a temporary file, but as you said, it takes up a large amount of space.
Why don't you post an example of the pixelation your seeing? I suspect it's just mesquito noise, but that's just it. I'm guessing. Also, what error did you get in VDub? You mentioned it, but I don't see the error here.
I agree with Satstorm. CVD will give you more bitrate for your buck due to the slightly lower horizontal resolution (more bitrate for picture quality, less for the extra resolution). It's a good thing.Impossible to see the future is. The Dark Side clouds everything... -
Originally Posted by DJRumpy
I have to admit I havent found out how to create a CVD yet... -
Then I don't understand why I should use Huffyuv... My idea was to change the captured film which is about 15 GB direct from my Digicam to something with a filesize about 1-2 GB so that I could store it on my HD as an "original" from which I can do my philm editing... anyways...I will try to post a tiny clip or an image or something. It's pretty simple ...things that move fast gets pixelated (or more like blocky...large pixels...). The noice in the calm areas is OK for viewing. To explain further..in one single frame the calm water looks just fine but the flying seagull looks bad. It also looks bad when I'm panning the camera to fast.
I have to admit I havent found out how to create a CVD yet...
Other than that, I would suggest just keeping the original tapes. DV tapes aren't that expensive now and you have your full quality DV source available to transfer back to your HD whenever you want. -
I said Huffy is good only as a Temporary file. It's not a good permanent format due to it's size.
Since you don't have a lot of drive space, then you'll have to frameserve. The problem you describe sounds like a plain old bit shortage. Typically bad encoders will do this. If that is the case, then CVD will indeed help with the bit shortage. CVD is pretty much the exact same thing as SVCD, except the resolution is different.
SVCD: MPEG-2 480x480, 44.1 Khz Audio
CVD: MPEG-2 352x480, 44.1 Khz Audio
The lower resolution lets you take the bitrate that would have been applied to the higher resolution and apply it to the video quality (or audio) instead.
You should try another encoder if yours isn't giving you good results. Either that, or ensure that you have your encoder setup properly for your source material. If your source is interlaced, use 'Alternate' for the block scanning order. Also check to see if they offer a lower bitrate matrix. I've never used Premiere, but someone here should be able to help you with any specific settings.Impossible to see the future is. The Dark Side clouds everything... -
Originally Posted by DJRumpy
Lets sy the gull takes up 1/3 of the TV-screen and this clutter appears all the time. (Some rare times when I pushed the pause button on my DVD the gull was pretty sharp...)
I'm in your hands....
Mats
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Originally Posted by SatStorm
Where can I find these filters? I feel like really stupid...
Mats
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Don't feel like stupid, all once were like you on this.
Virtualdub filters here: http://neuron2.net/
Those pixels you have are natural: SVCD's highest bitrate is to low to support a picture with motion like this!
Using filters gonna impove a lot the picture, but don't expect total elimination for bitrates >3200
You need a DVD burner soon.... -
Originally Posted by SatStorm
Mats
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