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  1. wasn't sure what motion search to use, so i tried the slowest one that says best quality, and now the audio is off, and there are streaks as the people move....is this becuase of the motion search i selected, or something else??

    thanks in advance
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  2. that will be interlace lines. have you viewed your clip on your TV set yet? you may not see any lines when played on your TV, but will see then on the computer.
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  3. Member wulf109's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2002
    Location
    United States
    Search Comp PM
    go into Tmpeg's advanced settings and double-click de-interlace.
    select "double". click ok. confirm that de-interlace is checked and says double. No need to use slowest setting. fast motion search or normal are more than adequate.
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  4. could be your framerate too (re:audio). you need to post
    more details sguch as what is your source, what settings &
    methods u use for encoding etc.
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  5. i will try the de-interlace feature, but i don't really wanna waste 8 hrs and have it come back bad again....i have tried about 6 different settings on stuff, so i honestly don't remember what i've tried...the last one was 16:9, interlace, bottom field first, full screen (keep aspect ratio), inverse telecine, ghost and noise reduction, sharpen image, simple color correction, clip frame, 3:2 pulldown...

    i added a bunch of stuff just to see what happened, but what would really be helpful is if 1 or 2 people just posted up their personal preferences of what they use, i'd like to try a few, and see which suites me best...i read both of sefy's tutorials, and i didn't like the settings, the picture just wasn't good enough...anyone willing to give suggestions??

    thanks
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  6. Member
    Join Date
    May 2002
    Location
    Rainy City, England
    Search Comp PM
    Originally Posted by dauthawhitemeat
    i will try the de-interlace feature, but i don't really wanna waste 8 hrs
    You don't need to waste 8 hours. Use the Source range in advanced settings and encode several short test clips. 8) When you get ghosting due to an interlaced source, there is no particular bunch of settings which will work in every case. You have to work out the best settings.

    What you describe does sound like a particular type of interlace effect. This may or may not be removed by setting odd or even field in the interlace filter. Using this adjusted to a problem area, you can often see the visible result of the filter without encoding. In rare cases the ghosting is not removable, as it is present on individual frames. The region 2 DVD Casino is an example.
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