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  1. I'm baffled by this problem, perhaps someone can give me a clue here!

    I have a Sony DVP-NS575P player attached with a modulator to an older
    Sharp TV. The player plays "commercial" (ie: Purchased or rented)
    DVDs beautifully.

    The problem is any disc I make (DVD-R, CD-R, CD-RW) plays ok, but
    video looks overexposed and washed-out. It is watchable, but not
    nearly the quality of commercial discs. I have tried all the settings
    on the player to no avail. This happens on DVDs recorded on other burners (not just mine) as well.

    Any help appreciated,
    Bob
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  2. Member yoda313's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
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    The Animus
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    Hello,
    Which discs are you using? Are they + or - r? What brands are they? If it happens with any burned disc than it may be the player itself. If its more than 2 or 3 years old it may not like the home discs.

    Though, thats surprising. My sony dvps360 is quite old and doesn't play cdrs or svcd but does dvd-r,+r, and rewritables.

    Do the burned discs show the same results on your computer? Just a few thoughts. Hope you can correct it.

    Kevin
    P.S. Do you mean an rf modulator? Maybe you should try a newer model. It might have problems with burnt discs, though why I haven't a clue.
    Donatello - The Shredder? Michelangelo - Maybe all that hardware is for making coleslaw?
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  3. Member GreyDeath's Avatar
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    Apr 2002
    Location
    Chicago, Illinois USA
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    I don't think it matters on what the material is burned to, but how the DVD material was encoded. I've found that the DVDs I author may look fine on the computer, but appear too dark and saturated on regular NTSC TV's. So I've had to tweak my set up to color correct the video when it renders.

    And any DVD you make is not going to ever look as good as a commerial DVD. Even if you spend thousands on a pro setup, you'll still be limited by the source material.

    Believe me, I know, after 6 months of trying to make the perfect capture of the Star Wars Trilogy, I had to accept that I was not going to get a visually perfect print because the source (laserdisc) doesn't compare to DVD.

    So, take a look at your video settings, maybe you're capturing too brightly. It's all a matter of trial and tweeking...
    "*sigh* Warned you, we tried. Listen, you did not. Now SCREWED, we all will be!" ~Yoda
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  4. Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2000
    Location
    United States
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    Go to http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/index.php , click on "DVD Recorders, and do a search for "Black level bug".
    I don't have a bad attitude...
    Life has a bad attitude!
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  5. Thanks for the tips, the problem I'm having is the "black level IRE" problem. This is spelled out pretty well at:

    http://www.signvideo.com/dv-black-levels-dvd-authoring-mpeg-2-part-1.htm

    https://www.videohelp.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=219752&highlight=black+levels

    Turns out that it has to do with converting digital camcorder video to DVD video. The black levels are different and must be adjusted, but all DVDs compensate differently. What a quagmire!

    All I wanted to do is put some vacation video on a DVD using Adobe Premier Pro and Nero! If anyone has a good recipe for this please let me know!
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  6. Please do not cross post. One topic is enough

    /Moderator bugster
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