My stuff is all NTSC including my player. However, I've an order for my DVD in PAL format...but how would I test it to make sure it plays properly?
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Put it in your DVD player and try to play it.
Since it's probably a different region code than your player the player will refuse to play it. You'll need a region free hack.
If you get that far the next hurdle is PAL to NTSC conversion. Unless your player supports it you'll get a garbled picture.
I believe many of the Cyberhome players support both those features. Thank you wife! -
When you say "I've an order for my DVD in PAL format" - is that a DVD player or material on a disc?
There is some corner of a foreign field that is forever England: Telstra Stadium, Sydney, 22/11/2003.
Carpe diem.
If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much room. -
Material on a disc
It's now mpg2 @ 29.97fps
I can convert to PAL ok (haven't tried yet but saw the option with my authoring software)
Just need to test the disc somehow
Thx -
Oh, you need to make a PAL DVD from your NTSC material. Short of purchasing (or renting?) a bunch of PAL equipment, I think all you can do is make it to PAL specs and play it on your computer and your DVD player (if it supports PAL to NTSC conversion).
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Originally Posted by zoobie
The general rule of thumb is that PAL material doesn't usually play on NTSC machines (DVD players and / or TV's), but NTSC material invariably plays on newer (say last 5 years or so) PAL machines.There is some corner of a foreign field that is forever England: Telstra Stadium, Sydney, 22/11/2003.
Carpe diem.
If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much room. -
I looked in the manual and it says it only supports NTSC
That's why I'm askin
I guess I could sneak a disc into a player that supports PAL at a store
or just send it with high hopes of working properly -
Check the DVD player list here:
https://www.videohelp.com/dvdplayers?DVDname=cyberhome
and see if somebody reports PAL to NTSC conversion. -
Originally Posted by zoobie
I do friends wedding videos and preview my authored material this way before burning the finished article to the final disc...
I check navigation, spelling, audio levels, compilation etc. this way. One thing to be careful of is the difference between monitor settings and TV settings - colours, brightness, contrast etc. - especially monitors work on something like 16 - 240 (somethings), whereas TV's are 0 - 255 (somethings) I think... Someone else help here...
Or, if it's a business, get yourself (invest) in a DVD player that supports PAL.There is some corner of a foreign field that is forever England: Telstra Stadium, Sydney, 22/11/2003.
Carpe diem.
If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much room. -
Hey...I burnt one and it played. I doubled checked the specs and sure enough, it says MULTI, NTSC & PAL after all.
Unfortunately, my burning ap screwed it up when I told it not to re-encode complient mpgs...but that's another story.
Thx -
Most PAL countries and PAL (region 2) players can play NTSC because Japan (NTSC) is region 2.
Older TVs have a problem with it though.
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