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  1. Hi,
    When I'm converting my DV 2.0 avi's to DVD mpeg with TMPGEnc or any other conversion tool the mpeg ends up alot lighter than the original.
    If I play the video with the DV as source(trough my computer or a camrecorder) it looks great, but burnt down to a dvd+r it looks terrible.

    I could probably fix it with the simple color conversion tool or something, but why does this happen, and is there any simple way way to avoid it?
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  2. Member daamon's Avatar
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    Jun 2003
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    Melbourne, Oz
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    Hi julen001,

    Welcome to the forums

    Check out this guide:

    https://www.videohelp.com/guides.php?guideid=303#303

    ...on TMPGEnc settings - particularly the bit about "Output basic YCbCr" under the "Quantize matrix" section.

    That might be of use / interest...

    Be sure to vote for the guide if you use it.
    There is some corner of a foreign field that is forever England: Telstra Stadium, Sydney, 22/11/2003.

    Carpe diem.

    If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much room.
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  3. Hm thank's, but i didn't find anything that could help me out.
    That setting was already set to the right option, and changing it just gave me an even lighter picture.
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  4. Be sure to compare your DV source and DVD-r on a TV and not the computer. Computer monitors have expanded color levels.

    Computer = 0-255
    TV = 16-235

    Some programs automatically compensate for that when viewing, but to be sure test on your TV.
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  5. Well yeah, I've watched it on the TV with my computer as source via the tv-out and on a TV trough my camrecorder. It's definitely lighter after the conversion to mpeg, and no matter wath the tools I use, it seems.
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  6. I would test on a stand alone DVD player.

    Computer might be compressing the 0-255 down to 16-235 before it sends it out through the tv-out.
    That means your 16-235 DVD-R is being compressed down to 32-205 through the tv-out.
    Again this is all dependent on programs used and how.

    This is just a guess though, sorry.

    My VHS captures through my DVcam passthrough, converted with TMPGenc, with "Output basic YCbCr" enabled, look exactly like the source.
    I test on TV and switch between DVD player and VCR and look for differences, including black levels.
    I just tell you this because it is possible to do what you want. There is just something unknown messing it up, it seems, in your process.
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  7. Yeah thank's for the help, but i've been testing trough the s-video out on my camera as well, and the dvd's i burn gets insanely light too!
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