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  1. Member
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    Feb 2004
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    I am not sure of the techical name of the jilted movements I am getting from my TMPGEnc encoded SVCDs but I hope there is a way to smooth out the results. I would also appreciate knowing what this is called...for instance, if there is a scene where a car is moving off into the distance and in my resulting SVCD it appears to kind of start and stop and start and stop and so on. I would like to know what I can set in TMPGEnc to smooth that out where it will look normal and not jilted.
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  2. Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2003
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    sunny old london
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    Well, if your source is NTSC and you convert it to PAL (or vice versa) your gonna have a "jittery" picture.
    Use G SPOT to see what format your source is .

    if your source is 29,97 fps or 23,976 then convert your file in NTSC format

    if your source is 25 fps then convert your file into pal format

    this worked for me so give it a try
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  3. Member
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    Feb 2004
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    I don't know where you got the idea that I am converting PAL or NTSC. My player plays both so I am not doing that. I am just trying to get rid
    of the jumpy or jittery video and replace that with smooth movement.
    Hey Mr. Taggert...ya want some beans?
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  4. Originally Posted by saladonyourlincoln
    I don't know where you got the idea that I am converting PAL or NTSC. My player plays both so I am not doing that. I am just trying to get rid of the jumpy or jittery video and replace that with smooth movement.
    He got the idea that you are converting PAL or NTSC because you are producing a SVCD and therefore using TMPGenc to create an MPEG file which is going to be either PAL or NTSC. You are converting from something (but you don't say what) which is gonna be either PAL or NTSC. My guess is some kinda d/l'd Divx/Xvid file, which is gonna be PAL or NTSC.

    Use GSpot to identify video details and encode accordingly in TMPGenc. If its a 29.92 fps film use the NTSC template. If its 23.97 fps use the NTSCFilm template. If its 25 fps use the PAL template.


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