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  1. I have this DVD movie on a DVD disk that I recorded off of TV. It is a B&W 90 minute movie. At a certain point in the recording the TV had the reception interrupted for about a second or two and then came back to normal. Unfortunatly it was recorded on the DVD.

    So, I wanted to load the movie file onto my hard drive and edit out that glitch in the movie. I captured the movie files into VideoStudio 10 and was successful in removing about 5 or 6 frames where the glitch was. After that I played the movie back from the VS playback and it looked pretty good and the removal of the few frames didn't mess the movie up.

    Ok, so now I wanted to take this edited movie and write it back onto the hard drive in the same DVD format it was in when I copied it from the DVD to my hard drive (.INF and .VOB files). I clicked on the 'Share' button and selected Create Disk. Then I selected the folder option instead of the disk option and started to write it onto the hard drive. Well the problem here is that it is going to take about 5 hours to do this. I don't understand why if it only took a few minutes to load it into VideoStudio onto the time line (and I know VS converted it to MPEG because I saw the files it created) then why does it take 5 hours to change it back to the VOB format? Don't understand this one. Any way, the real problem is that every time it gets about 2 to 3 hours into the writing process VS cancels. When I restarted VS I didn't have the option of restarting from the previous attempt or at least I didn't see where I did have that option so I had to start all over again with the writing to the hard drive. But again, it canceled after a couple of hours. Well this is getting a little irratating so I though maybe I could work around this. I know that I can trim this movie from one point to another either using VS or DVD Shrink and make two or more smaller movies and having each part in it's own folder of .INF and .VOB files. I'm thinking that if I do this in VS then I can write out each part and it wouldn't take but only an hour or so to do each part. Once I have these smaller movie parts is it possible to combine the INF and VOB files from each part into one?

    It's just a though and perhaps a 'not so smart' thought and maybe there is a better way of handling this. I just don't trust VS to write out the entire movie in one session. I have no idea why VS is unstable and I have re-installed it several times but it still screws up after several hours of processing. It's not a space problem on the HD because that is 20GB's of available space and my OS is Windows 2000 SP4 with DirectX 9.0.
    I am a newbie to this video stuff so please don't give me alot of high tech mumbo-jumbo, just the facts.
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  2. Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Location
    Australia
    Search Comp PM
    If it is on a dvd , then rip it to pc ... and go to this

    Commercial removal

    https://forum.videohelp.com/viewtopic.php?t=291744

    Very similar , same principle's involved ...

    Copy only the vob that has the error in it to a new folder .
    Open this vob that has the error , and apply the technique's to it .

    When all is done , rename the new vob to original id , and put it back in folder it came from .

    ===============

    Now to fix thing's ...

    Run vobedit , open first vob ... choose demux , demux mpeg stream and "complete title set" ... choose output folder and go .
    Repeat , but now audio , normal ac3 english is 0x80 , complete title set , to same folder as mpeg stream , and go .

    Delete all ripped dvd file's .

    Run rejig , click "author dvd" .
    Load that m2v video stream you ripped out using vobedit .
    Load that audio file next .
    Choose folder for output .

    Let it rip ... when completed , burn to dvd .

    The error is gone in clip .
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