Hi all. Please help me guys - I have made a home movie on my PC from footage made from my Panasonic NV-DS60 MiniDV video camera for my sons first birthday. Below are some details of what's going on:
Here are my PC specs:
- Pentium4 2.6GHz
- 512mb RAM
- Using Windows XP 2002 operating system
Here is a list of what I've been doing:
-Capturing the video as High Quality Video (PAL) with the following options
- File Type - WMV
- Bit Rate - variable bit rate
- Display Size - 720 x 576 pixels
- Frames per second - 25
-Editing the footage & adding audio/music and photos on Windows Movie Maker
-I then save the file as a DV-AVI file
-I convert this using WinAvi to DVD with the following options
- Constant Video Quality
- Quality: Highest
- Preference: By Quality
- PAL, 4:3
- Audio Bitrate - 192000
- DirectAC3 enabled
-I use Nero to burn the DVD
Here is my problem:
Most of my movie (only 13 minutes long) turns out really well (both audio and picture) but there are 3 scenes that despite me tryng to re-capture it seems to have a low frame-rate or something. The picture doesn't jump as such but when there is movement it seems really jerky. This is only happening on about 90 seconds of this and I've really got no idea why this is happening. I checked the details of the newly captured video and here are the details (when i check the properties of the WMV file):
- Picture Size: width 720 pixels, height 576 pixels
- AUDIO Bit Rate 1357 kbps
- Audio Sample Size 16 bit
- Channels 2 (stereo)
- VIDEO data rate 1195 kbps**
- Video Sample Size 24 Bit
- Stream Name Video 2
** On other video I have captured using the same method the video data rate is ususally around 1600 - 1700 and the audio bit rate is up around 7000 - 9000. Could this be my problem (low bit rate??) If so how do I increase this? If this isn't the problem I'm hoping someone here can help me. Sorry for the large post but I wanted to give as much info as possible. The programs I'm using usually work fine for all the other DVD's I've made (so I'm hoping this problem can be fixed without buying / downloadnig anymore progams) but trying to get these 3 scenes right is driving me crazy!![]()
Thanks in advance for helping...![]()
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Breeding in this day & age is criminally irresponsible. Go kill yourself, dickwad!
You are in breach of the forum rules and are being issued with a formal warning.
/ Moderator vitualis
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Originally Posted by Waverley73
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What the Coalman said but adding that the jerkiness is probably due to incorrect field order. If you stay as DV AVI right through to the encode to mpeg stage, the field order should remain correct. Don't ever use wmv, it isn't worth the hard drive space the encoder takes up.....
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Thanks alot for your comments (obviously excluding the waste of space that was a post by Yobbo - I'm assuming the mods take care of absolute drivel such as this).
So if I capture the scenes I want as DV-AVI, and keep the movie file in that format right through until I burn the DVD the results should be better?
The other movies I've been making are around an hour long (just home vid stuff of family) so capturing them as DV-AVI will mean a file size of around 10 to 11 gig. My hard drive is Fat32 (as opposed to NTFS) which has the max file size of 2 gig. I've read the pros and cons about reformatting my hard-drive to NTFS but I want to be absolutely sure doing that wont have any adverse effects on my current programs / files.** I love lamp -
Most importantly, Richard_G is correct, the field order is likely the cause of the problem. Moving objects will jump forward & backward when it's wrong. You won't be able to see this on the PC either, by the way, unless the viewer/player "bobs" the video.
Most if not all DV is Bottom Field First and needs to be encoded in MPEG2 that way. Some encoders have a setting for this, others rely on an indicator from the input. -
Originally Posted by Richard_G
it isn't worth the hard drive space the encoder takes up....
Originally Posted by Waverley73 -
Originally Posted by Waverley73
Banned..... what's really odd is that account is 1.5 years old and that was his first post.
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I'm still trying to figure out what Waverly73 said that was so offensive. Using WMV? Not a well informed choice, but certainly not offensive.
As stated in other posts, I also believe that your problem is field order (especially if the jerkiness is only in the scenes with heavy movement).ICBM target coordinates:
26° 14' 10.16"N -- 80° 16' 0.91"W -
Originally Posted by SLK001** I love lamp
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Originally Posted by Barnabas
The thing that confuses me is that all the other video I've captured using the same methods have all worked fine..** I love lamp -
Originally Posted by Waverley73
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Originally Posted by thecoalman
) I don't suppose there are any decent freeware converters I could use that would allow me to edit the field order?
** I love lamp -
Originally Posted by Waverley73
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Originally Posted by thecoalman** I love lamp
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Originally Posted by Waverley73
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Originally Posted by thecoalman
Thanks for your help on this.** I love lamp -
Originally Posted by Waverley73
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Originally Posted by Waverley73ICBM target coordinates:
26° 14' 10.16"N -- 80° 16' 0.91"W -
Originally Posted by SLK001~Luke~
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Is this something new? Like a "drive-by" flaming? Or an act of random character assasination?
ICBM target coordinates:
26° 14' 10.16"N -- 80° 16' 0.91"W -
Originally Posted by SLK001** I love lamp
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With only 1 post, I'm assuming it was a police assisted suicide of an unused account.
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