I have a few Video CDs that i'd like to put onto a DVD-R and have them play as if they were a normal DVD. But i don't feel like spending hours upon hours, doing all kinds of research, reencodeing, transcodeing, resizeing and all that other crap.
Are there any simple 1-click type programs out there that will save me the headaches, do all the work and put the VCD files into DVD format, to later be burned in a program like nero?
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After actually doing all those hours upon hours of research, I can confirm right now that you don't need to re-encode, transcode, resize or do any other crap to a VCD to get it playable on a DVD ...
... But if you'd taken 5 minutes to look at the stickies, or done a forum search, you might have found this one
Extract the MPEG out of the DAT files using ISOBuster or VCDGear. Drop the MPEG files into TMPGEnc DVD Author, and it'll do the rest.
Not 1-click, but not rocket science eitherIf in doubt, Google it. -
Originally Posted by jimmalenko"Art is making something out of nothing and selling it." - Frank Zappa
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Originally Posted by Star Warrior
I find both ISObuster and VCDGear easy to use, especially when there's this guide for ISOBuster
TMPGEnc DVD Author cannot convert PAL to NTSC - there's a few guides here on how to do it - but I don't think they'll be for youIf in doubt, Google it. -
I think theres a mpeg encoder on Nero that has the Pal/NTSC option. Could i use nero to convert it to NTSC?
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Originally Posted by jimmalenko
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Originally Posted by jimmalenko
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Originally Posted by Star Warrior
IMHO, Nero's encoding engine is sub-par, to say the least. I believe in using dedicated tasks to do dedicated jobs, and Nero's all-in-one NeroVison Express just doesn't cut the mustard IMO. PAL/NTSC conversions are difficult at the best of times, and given that we're talking about VCD sources, I can only assume that the sources for them were downloaded, which means they were probably lacking in quality to start with. If the source was DVD, you'd just do a DVD to DVD backup, wouldn't you ? At the very least, you'd do the PAL/NTSC conversion using the DVD as source, anyways.
The ISOBuster/VCDGear & TDA method that I mentioned above is IMO the fastest/easiest way to do this. As for PAL/NTSC, it's not a drama for me as I have a multisystem DVD Player and TV. Maybe you should investigate this possibility also, or put up with (IMO) sub-standard results from NVE.If in doubt, Google it. -
Mustard aside, nero should be fine for his purpose. If the sources are VCD to begin with, what's the point of trying to use some higher quality method dump them to a DVD?
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Originally Posted by stillmars321
Got any other ways to convert Pal to NTSC? -
Also would converting a Pal DVD to a NTSC DVD be any easier than converting a VCD?
I was able to get it onto a DVD just fine, now its only the Pal signal stuff i have a problem with. Any help would be appreciated. -
Originally Posted by Star WarriorIf in doubt, Google it.
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hey jimmalenko,i need to go to the toilet and take a dump,would you wipe my ass for me.?
as i cant be bothered going through the motions of ripping off a piece of toilet paper,and wiping my own ass.its just too bothersome.
roflmao. -
you should also re-encode the audio from 44000 to 48000 to make the vcd a dvd-compliant mpeg 1
member since 1843 -
Originally Posted by ricky1756If in doubt, Google it.
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Originally Posted by jimmalenko
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> audio from 44000 to 48000
> TMPGEnc DVD Author takes care of that little problem automatically
When I put all my VCDs on DVDs I found that have to resample the audio really slowed down DVD Author, and about 1 out of 3 times it would hang up after working 15-20 minutes.
For me it worked much faster to change the audio in TMPGEnc Plus or Goldwave first. -
Originally Posted by BobK
@ jimmalenko
You have the patience of a Saint.Cole -
Originally Posted by jimmalenko
I was reluctant to resort to this because a few years ago when i had my old Pc, a 1.3Ghz celeron 128K L2 Cache , it would take FOREVER to do ANYTHING in TMPGEnc.
However my new Pc, a 2.8Ghz Celeron D with 256K L2 Cache, went pretty quick. Only took about 15-20 minutes to encode each hour of video.
Once i was done with my new set of NTSC VCD files, i processed it again with TMPGEnc DVD Author and then burned with Nero. The end result was good and i sucessfully put 8 VCDs onto 1 DVD-R! (Still had almost 2GBs left over btw)
Thanks!
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