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  1. hey
    i want to make a VCD i know how to but
    i want to make it on a DVD with a menu

    if i make VCD on a CD 700 MB i can put 1 movie

    on a DVD 4.7gig i suppose i can put at least 5 x 700 then 5 movie

    i just get my dvd burner and need to learn a bit more about the différent thing i can do. thx for help

    i tryed easy VCD but i cant do it
    cd r win to ...
    win avi
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  2. Just convert the Audio to DVD specs.
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  3. ???

    my prob isnt an audio prob its because i want to make a vcd on a dvd but their is no program doing it?
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  4. do you want to put the VCD Videos on DVD? and make a DVD menu? Then do what i said the video is already Spec for DVD you just need to Convert the Audio. If i understand the question that is.
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  5. Member thecoalman's Avatar
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    NTSC DVD Video Specs:

    Up to 9.8 Mbps* (9800 kbps*) MPEG2 video
    Up to 1.856 Mbps (1856 kbps) MPEG1 video
    720 x 480 pixels MPEG2 (Called Full-D1)
    704 x 480 pixels MPEG2
    352 x 480 pixels MPEG2 (Called Half-D1, same as the CVD Standard)
    352 x 240 pixels MPEG2
    352 x 240 pixels MPEG1 (Same as the VCD Standard)
    29,97 fps*
    23,976 fps with 3:2 pulldown = 29,97 playback fps (NTSC Film, this is only supported by MPEG2 video)
    16:9 Anamorphic (only supported by 720x480)


    Audio:
    48000 Hz
    32 - 1536 kbps
    Up to 8 audio tracks containing DD (Dolby Digital/AC3), DTS, PCM(uncompressed audio), MPEG-1 Layer2. One audio track must have DD or PCM Audio.

    This and a whole lot of other info can be found to the left.
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  6. Or just add your VCDs to TMPGenc DVD Author and it will take a while to convert the audio but will convert it for you. If you spring for the AC3 plug-in it'll even convert the audio to Ac3 for you.

    I do it all the time, However at the cost of DVD blanks $0.30 or so, I only do it when I am converting old VCDs to get them onto 1 disk.

    Cheers
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  7. thank for the info
    i will find the rest

    (damn answer come so fast )
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  8. Member thecoalman's Avatar
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    BTW, you might want to consider using MPEG2, it will give you a little more flexibility. This is not to say change you VCD ones to MPEG2 but use it for future video.
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  9. Myself anything I capture these days as 1/2 D1 or full D1... although I got lazy and use a DVD recorder lots of the time or pull out the ADVC 100 if the source needs to be cleaned up. VCDs to DVD are mainly to free up shelf space.

    Cheers
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  10. okay now i just realise why put many vcd on a dvd dvd a so cheap .30$ like they said before

    i take a avi file (from cameras..)
    and convert it to dvd with winavi like the tutorial said

    but to burn i take the folder named DVD_0 or the vob files inside?
    and the progress bar dont change it dont get up (for vcd it was moving...)

    i suppose than i should make another post elsewhere for this question?
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  11. DVDLab will let you author multiple VCD's directly to DVDR, without re-encoding.
    Your player may not play it though, check first.
    Remember, it's VCD, so it's still going to be VCD quality, no matter what medium you burn it to.
    Cheers, Jim
    My DVDLab Guides
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