VideoHelp Forum




+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 9 of 9
  1. In nero sometimes if you have a movie thats longer than the disk size, say 800 mgs

    it says something about multi session, dose that then mean that i burn it with muilti session then it burns and fills up the 1st cd then asks for anotherone to complete the job?

    or how to do split it to do that?


    anyone know?
    Quote Quote  
  2. Multi-session allows you to partially fill up a disc during one session and resume burning additional data at a later session.

    It is mostly useful for data discs not movie.
    Quote Quote  
  3. Multi-session allows you to partially fill up a disc during one session and resume burning additional data at a later session.

    It is mostly useful for data discs not movie.
    Quote Quote  
  4. Ok thanks

    how can you spilt a movie onto 2 vcd's is there a that can be used for that?
    Quote Quote  
  5. i also forgot to say if its dvix or avi
    Quote Quote  
  6. Member AlecWest's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2002
    Location
    Vader, WA, USA
    Search Comp PM
    Originally Posted by TomKatt
    In nero sometimes if you have a movie thats longer than the disk size, say 800 mgs
    I'm assuming you're trying to burn a video CD (VCD) on a CDR disk ... correct?
    Originally Posted by TomKatt
    it says something about multi session, dose that then mean that i burn it with muilti session then it burns and fills up the 1st cd then asks for anotherone to complete the job?
    jyn999 gave the correct definition of "multisession." Basically, every time you burn a CD, Nero will "finalize" the disk (making further burns to the same disk impossible) unless you tell Nero otherwise.
    Originally Posted by TomKatt
    or how to do split it to do that?
    To split a large VCD file into more than one file (2, 3, etc. files), it's probably best to use TMPGEnc (free for MPEG-1 files, aka VCD files). I could be wrong but don't think there is any utility to "shrink" MPEG-1 data to fit on a VCD. Also, if burning a VCD, it's best to be concerned about the timelength of the video than the filesize. Most CDR disks sold today, except for "extended play" CDRs, say 80 minutes, 700 megs on them. But, you can burn, say, a 79-minute VCD even if the filesize exceeds 700 megs. There are extended-play CDRs that can hold 99 minutes ... but you need to make darn sure that your burner can handle them. If you try to burn one with an incompatible burner, it might damage your burner in the attempt.

    Good luck.
    Quote Quote  
  7. Member AlecWest's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2002
    Location
    Vader, WA, USA
    Search Comp PM
    Originally Posted by TomKatt
    i also forgot to say if its dvix or avi
    All VCDs are MPEG-1 "MPG" files. DivX and AVI files must be converted into the MPG format before a VCD can be burned. BTW, if you have an AVI file that's 800 megs in size (just guessing here), it's quite likely you'll have a much larger (and longer, view-time-wise) MPG ... requiring 2, 3 or more VCDs to burn it. TMPGEnc will only cut MPG files, BTW.
    Quote Quote  
  8. Hi Alec,

    I have tried that TMPGEnc b4 but its realy slow it takes something like 15 hours or more to do things is there anything faster around?
    Quote Quote  
  9. Member AlecWest's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2002
    Location
    Vader, WA, USA
    Search Comp PM
    Originally Posted by TomKatt
    I have tried that TMPGEnc b4 but its realy slow it takes something like 15 hours or more to do things is there anything faster around?
    Click Here for a number of guides to do VCD conversion. There are a lot of different methods to convert DivX/AVI files to VCD. Problem is, many of them cost $$. But, you may find a free way in there somewhere. I only used TMPGEnc during my VCD days.
    Quote Quote  



Similar Threads

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