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  1. Member
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    This is probably a dumb question..

    I have these videos (XVID AVI) that I would like to burn onto DVDs....I'm using the Ulead DVD Moviefactory that came with my computer and after I playback the DVD that I burned on my computer, I noticed that the picture looks squished. I have yet to test it out on a TV, but usually other DVDs I've burned look fine on my computer.

    My original files are 720x486, so how should I set the aspect ratio and picture size so that the picture will not appear squished? Or is there another program that would be a better encoder to convert AVIs? Or maybe I had i right all this time and it'll always just looks weird on my computer?
    Thanx in advance
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    did you open them with mediaInfo or gspot to see what the aspect ratio is

    chances are, they are NOT 4:3, and 486 is unusual for avi height
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    hi...

    I opened up gspot and checked the file...and it is 720x486....DAR is 40:27.....eeek....

    so it's gonna squish either way right? I switched over to MainConcept to reencode and I was thinking of taking 3 pixels off the top and bottom to see if that would help, but that software will not let me do it....
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  4. Always Watching guns1inger's Avatar
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    What is the PAR (Pixel Aspect Ratio) ?

    If it is 1:1 then you need to resize it 720 x 448, add black bars, and encode.

    Note : Assumes NTSC.
    Read my blog here.
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    Originally Posted by guns1inger
    What is the PAR (Pixel Aspect Ratio) ?

    If it is 1:1 then you need to resize it 720 x 448, add black bars, and encode.

    Note : Assumes NTSC.
    Yeah...PAR is 1:1...

    And I believe that worked!!! Used Virtualdub to resize and add....Wow...thanx so much

    So how does that all work? I'm not seeing the math....
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  6. Always Watching guns1inger's Avatar
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    The math is complex because it is influenced by the output format you need. There are four possible combinations (PAL/4:1, PAL/16:9, NTSC/4:3, NTSC/16:9) and each requires a different calculation.

    The simplest method is to use a calculator that does the work for you. I wrote one a while back, which is what I used to get your numbers. Even better is a program called FitCD, which will not only do the calculation for you, but write you an avisynth script as well. Worth having if you do avi to DVD encoding manually.
    Read my blog here.
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    thanx again guns1inger...trying FitCD as well to see if it'll give me a better picture....
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  8. Member
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    if you need to do improvements on your source during conversion

    use fitcd to get a basic avs avisynth script

    then load the script into AvsP anothe script editor, which gives you preview functions, you can see what the various filters/commands will do to your source file

    when you have the output looking like you want , save the avs file then open that in your encoder

    of course if your enhance the source, color , noise filters, etc.. it will slow the encoding process down, but it does give you virtualdub type control over avisynth frame server, and can be very useful in some cases
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  9. Member
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    cool...thanx ewizard...

    i actually took the script and loaded it into mainconcept (tried TMPGenc and TMPGenc Xpress and both gave me issues with messed up audio)...

    the video actually looks terrific, better than i had expected actually.

    thanx again guys!!!
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