VideoHelp Forum




+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 14 of 14
  1. I am currently experiencing fuzziness when things moving fast on the videowhen viewed (people moving fast, fast actions moves, ect.). I don't know how tofix this and would appreciate any ones help in clearing this. My setup consists:JVC SR-V10U, datavideo TBC-1000, ATI AIW USB 600, computer has 8 GB ram, 3.4GHz core 2 duo with 4mb cache, 1TB hard drive. I don’t experience frame dropand no out of sync audio. This happened when I transfer the file to DVD andplayed it from my home DVD player viewing it on TV screen. Please help?
    Quote Quote  
  2. Don't deinterlace?
    Quote Quote  
  3. I am lost can you please clarify.
    Quote Quote  
  4. He's wondering if maybe you deinterlaced the video while making a DVD from your capture. If you still don't understand, maybe post a short ten second long piece of the DVD where this blurry movement takes place.
    Quote Quote  
  5. Member Cornucopia's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2001
    Location
    Deep in the Heart of Texas
    Search PM
    LCD with slow response time? I saw one at the checkout counter at the grocery store recently that smeared everything to SHIT! And things weren't even moving that fast (like slow new crawls, etc).

    Scott
    Quote Quote  
  6. Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Isle of Man
    Search Comp PM
    To me it sounds very much like incorrectly set field dominance, top field first or bottom field first. (Which is perhaps what jagabo has in mind when he mentions deinterlacing!)

    Cheers,
    Francois
    Quote Quote  
  7. Originally Posted by soundquality View Post
    I am lost can you please clarify.
    Upload a small sample of your DVD. You can use a program like Mpg2Cut2 to or DgIndex to extract a short section without re-encoding.
    Quote Quote  
  8. O.K. I uploaded 2 clips of video and 6 clips of imagecaptured to show the fuzziness within the video. Please help with anysuggestions on fixing this problem.
    Image Attached Thumbnails Click image for larger version

Name:	1.JPG
Views:	203
Size:	39.2 KB
ID:	17230  

    Click image for larger version

Name:	2.JPG
Views:	243
Size:	39.4 KB
ID:	17231  

    Click image for larger version

Name:	3.JPG
Views:	214
Size:	32.3 KB
ID:	17232  

    Click image for larger version

Name:	4.JPG
Views:	225
Size:	36.9 KB
ID:	17233  

    Click image for larger version

Name:	5.JPG
Views:	298
Size:	46.3 KB
ID:	17234  

    Click image for larger version

Name:	6.JPG
Views:	309
Size:	45.9 KB
ID:	17235  

    Image Attached Files
    • File Type: mpg 2.MPG (9.53 MB, 39 views)
    • File Type: mpg 1.MPG (5.21 MB, 34 views)
    Quote Quote  
  9. You captured an interlaced signal the resized the frame vertically without consideration that the frame was interlaced. This has caused the two fields to commingle. Capture at 720x480, burn to DVD at 720x480, 4:3 DAR.
    Quote Quote  
  10. I capture the video 720x480 lossless AVI but the DVD software I use doesn’thave that option to burn at 720x480, 4:3 DAR. I use 3 different software:wondershare, roxio and nero and could not find this setting which have the samevideo fussiness results. Is there better software recommended that I can use tofix this problem with this option mentioned?
    Quote Quote  
  11. Originally Posted by soundquality View Post
    I capture the video 720x480 lossless AVI but the DVD software I use doesn’thave that option to burn at 720x480, 4:3 DAR. I use 3 different software:wondershare, roxio and nero and could not find this setting which have the samevideo fussiness results. Is there better software recommended that I can use tofix this problem with this option mentioned?
    I suspect the software assume your source was 3:2 DAR since the frame size was 720x480 (a 3:2 ratio) and the AVI container doesn't really support aspect ratio flags. Within the software you used look for a way to override what the program thinks of the source aspect ratio. In many programs you right click on the video in the time line and select Properties, Source Properties, Aspect Ratio, or some such. Also look for a way to force the software to treat your video as interlaced, not progressive.

    Can you upload a short sample of your source video?
    Quote Quote  
  12. Originally Posted by soundquality View Post
    Is there better software recommended that I can use tofix this problem with this option mentioned?
    Anything other than Wondershare, Roxio, and Nero is better. Maybe try AVSToDVD. Also, you encoded as progressive, another big no-no with interlaced sources. Even had you not done an incorrect resize of the interlaced source, the chances are good your player would have still passed on the interlaced video to the TV set without deinterlacing it so you still would have seen the fuzzy images.

    Whatever software you use, make sure it isn't resized and make sure it's encoded as interlaced. Surely you noticed that your source didn't have those big black bars on top and bottom.

    Here's Baldrick's basic guide for AVSToDVD:

    https://www.videohelp.com/tools/AVStoDVD
    Quote Quote  
  13. @soundquality

    if you use AVStoDVD to convert your 720x480 AVI to MPG, after adding the AVI to the project, make sure to select 'Title'/'Edit Source Title Info'/'Video Display Aspect Ratio' and insert 1.333 instead of 1.5. AVStoDVD will automatically select the field order and encode the video as interlaced. Now the frame will not be changed and you should not get "fuzzy images".



    Bye
    MrC

    AVStoDVD Homepage
    Quote Quote  
  14. Thank you, _MrC_.
    Quote Quote  



Similar Threads

Visit our sponsor! Try DVDFab and backup Blu-rays!