VideoHelp Forum




+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 7 of 7
  1. Hi All I have just downloaded something that I cant watc nor convert

    The.xl.3ivx

    any 1 know what this is?


    Tom
    Quote Quote  
  2. download and use GSPOT. It will tell you what it is.
    Quote Quote  
  3. Thanks for the help


    Tom
    Quote Quote  
  4. Originally Posted by andkiich
    download and use GSPOT. It will tell you what it is.
    See my post about 3ivx. I went through all this for HOURS last night. First download Quicktime player then install it. This will play the movie. I'm sure it has a .mp4 extension. As for converting it to DVD, i'm still trying to figure this one out. I have successfully converted the video, i'm just not getting any audio out of TMPGEnc. I think it has something to do with the audio being AAC. Unfortunately, there isn't much out their about AAC audio conversion. HELP!

    This is TomKatt's thread - please refrain from hijacking it - you have
    already posted about your problems a couple of times. Be patient and
    I'm sure someone will be able to assist.

    Mod Offline
    Quote Quote  
  5. Well,

    I loaded that GSPOT but, on the right hand side it just says n/a a;; the way through it????


    Any ideas guys?


    Tom
    Quote Quote  
  6. Member teegee420's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Southern California
    Search Comp PM
    Did you install 3ivx yet?
    Quote Quote  
  7. Installing a DirectShow 3ivx filter should let you view and play the file. If you can view & play it but get no sound, that's because you haven't yet installed an AAC DirectShow filter to handle AAC audio. Download & install an AAC audio filter and then use either TMPGenc, or if TMPG won't handle it, MPG2AVI, to save the file as a standard DV type 1 or type 2 AVI with WAV file.
    Then encode resultant DV AVi file to MPEG-2, use BeSweet to conver the mpa layer 2 audio to ac3, and finally feed the m2v and ac3 into any DVD authoring program and burn the DVD.
    That's the way I burn DVDs of older forms of DiVX. Only difference being most of 'em were PAL format, so I had to do an extra step to convert NTSC to PAL (during video encoding).
    Rule of thumb: if you can output a video format as DV type 1 or type 2 AVI, you can *always* convert it to anything else.
    Quote Quote  



Similar Threads

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