My computer receives my cable TV signal through an analog video card over S-video cables.
I can capture the signal with the Roxio software that came with the card. I can even figure out how to edit it, but I can't seem to get four hours of movie on a 4.7 GB DVD. (My standalone Panasonic burner had no trouble with this when it worked.)
I'm willing to pay for other software to do this. (I hate Roxio in any case.) But I'm starting to be concerned that it's not possible.
Is it possible to burn a four hour movie to a 4.7 GB DVD (NTSC for viewing on a US DVD player)?
Thanks very much from an obvious newbie.
- charles thiesen
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Just lower the MPEG bitrate till it fits. A quick check with a bitrate calculator shows about 2300kbps. I would look into 1/2 D1 format to make the best use of a fairly low bitrate. See 'WHAT IS' DVD to the upper left for the DVD specification for 1/2 D1. It will still be DVD compliant.
You could try a short sample encode with full D1 and 1/2 D1 at that bitrate and compare the results.
What video card are you using for capture and in what format?
And welcome to our forums. -
Originally Posted by redwudz
TMpgenc DVD Author and Mpeg Video Wizard DVD have both been recommended here and I'd get one of them if it allowed doing this the way you suggest.
Thanks very much for the swift reply and the welcome. I'm an extremely savvy computer user, a tech writer, but in the world of video I"m a total newbie, so I greatly appreciate it.
- charles -
Use Tmpg DVD Author and author in two parts and burn two DVD's....they are certainly cheap enough! The Tmpg software has a built it mpg cut editor, frame accurate and will only re-encode a very small part of the video either side of the cut(s). It will also burn the DVD(s) if you want.
If you were to do very much of this using recordings with ads, I would edit with VideoReDo and author with Tmpg. VideoReDo also has an all in one package called TV Suite.....I'm happy with the aforesaid combination so haven't given TV Suite a try.
Could you use G Spot on the video file and post the results? -
352x480 MPEG with 2.5Mb/s with a good encoding software will be perfectly fine to produce 4 hours on a DVD. I've done it many times.
2 hours at 720x480 is the same quality as 4 hours at 352x480, on a good encoder.
Panasonic DVD recorders are terrible encoders, and Roxio is not very high quality either. 4 hours using these tools will look awful. Blocks and noise.Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
The sensible way to put a 4 hour movie on a 4.7 gb DVD is to use TWO DVDs and retain some quality. I personally would use 3 DVDs, 80 minutes each, which gives maximum quality.
The point is, why cram everything onto one DVD and kill the quality. You certainly are not going to sit there glued to the TV for 4 hours. Follow Hollywood when they made a long running movie...they stuck in an intermission. -
Originally Posted by lordsmurf
2 hours at 720x480 is the same quality as 4 hours at 352x480, on a good encoder.
Panasonic DVD recorders are terrible encoders, and Roxio is not very high quality either. 4 hours using these tools will look awful. Blocks and noise.
Thanks so much for the detailed response.
- charles[/quote] -
Originally Posted by bendixG15
Actually, storage is a problem for me, too, and that becomes a criterion that argues against two or three disks instead of one, if the quality isn't that different.
But your questions do help me remember that I'm faced with a plethora of new options. And all the help I'm getting here will get me closer to understanding how to take advantage of them.
Thanks,
- charles -
Back to original question
Originally Posted by cthiesen
Why a single layer and not double layer?
Does this absolutely need to play on an average DVD player?Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about -
Originally Posted by cthiesen
You use the MPEG files, plus the audio to author the DVD (i.e. create the VOB fileset).
And finally, you burn this to your DVD.
There are packages that combine all these functions, but it's more flexible to use separate utilites. Cheaper too.
You have to read up on the How-tos though: https://www.videohelp.com/guides
Anyway, HCEnc is a good free MPEG encoder. -
Encoding as mentioned by others applies to DV AVI or lesser compressed video. Mpg2 is already encoded and highly compressed.
Download Media info and use it to analyse your video file, then post the info here.
I would guess your ATI card hardware encodes to mpg2, 720X480 (mpa at 384kbs), at video bitrates of 4.0, 6.0, or 8.0 Mbs, just like the ATI Wonder Elite (550 Pro Card). 4.0 Mbs will allow 2 hours 18 minutes per single layer DVD and is pretty good if the input is very good, 6.0 Mbs will allow 1 Hour 34 min max per DVD and is as good as analog TV gets, and 8.0 is plain overkill.
The only way to shrink mpg2 down is to re-encode it. And re-encoding from 6.0 Mbs 720X480 to 2.3 Mbs at 352X480 will take a lot of PC time and produce a video that isn't even close to the quality of VHS EP....the motion aspects would be horrible, even worse that they are with any DVD recorder in 4 hour mode; mpg1 352X240 at 2.0 Mbs CBR would be better, but still poor compared to a good VHS EP recording.
If you are happy with video from a DVD recorder in 4 hour mode, more power to you. I can't stand to watch 5 minutes of that crap. -
Originally Posted by SmokieStover
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Originally Posted by edDV
Does this absolutely need to play on an average DVD player?
thanks,
- charles[/quote] -
Originally Posted by AlanHK
thanks,
- charles -
Originally Posted by cthiesen
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Originally Posted by cthiesen
Single layer MPeg2 will have serious artifacts at 4hr. Check your burner specs for dual layer support. Dual Layer DVD-9 disks have ~8GB capacity allowing about 4400Kb/s ave over four hours (see https://www.videohelp.com/calc )
If your player supports Divx/Xvid, you could fit 4hrs to a single layer but the quality won't be great.Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about -
Originally Posted by edDV
A 352x480 DVD will be fine, as good as 720x480 at 2 hours.Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
Originally Posted by lordsmurfRecommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about -
Originally Posted by redwudz
I'm starting to get the idea that the best way to squeeze more than two hours of video on a disk given my needs is to adjust the bitrate at which it's encoded (or however you say it.) Apparently my ATI card doesn't give me that choice, the lowest option being 4 MBps.
Do I need a different card? If so, any suggestions? I looked through the list of capture cards here, but can't figure out how to get that information.
thanks everyone,
- charles -
Originally Posted by cthiesen
Hardware MPEG compression engine -
MPEG-2 720x480 compression
CBR and VBR from 1 to 15 Mbps
Do these numbers mean that the card can capture at between 1 and 15 Mbps?
Does that mean, I just need software that will allow me to make the card do that?
Thanks,
- charles -
You can adjust size and bitrate in your AIW MPeg settings
352x480 @ 2Mb/s (2000Kb/s) to single layer 4.3GB DVD or 720x480 @4Mb/s to a dual layer 8GB DVD.Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about -
Originally Posted by edDV
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Originally Posted by cthiesenRecommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about -
I found this picture of the MMC menus on Lordsmurf's site www.DigitalFAQ.com
He has much info there on AIW cards.
You will find MPeg2 settings under "Custom"
Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about -
Originally Posted by edDV
Thanks for working so hard to help me. I'm embarrassed that I can't figure this out myself. I am trying though.
- charles -
If you use edDV's numbers of "352x480 @ 2Mb/s (2000Kb/s) to single layer 4.3GB DVD", that would give you about 4 1/2 hours of video on a DVD. I would adjust the bitrate up a little to 2300kb/s if you have just four hours. It depends on how much adjustment the AIW allows you.
You want your audio to be 48Khz, 16bit, 224khz most times for a DVD. Sometimes you can squeeze the audio down a bit and gain a little more bitrate for the video.
I would try a 1/2 D1 (352X480) capture at 2000Kb/s (2Mb/s) and see how it looks compared to a full DI (720X480) at that same bitrate. My guess is at that low bitrate 1/2 D1 will look a lot better. -
Originally Posted by cthiesen
If you are using Roxio, then the settings are in the Roxio software. Extreme realtime software only compression requires a very fast computer and even then quality will suffer without using the hardware on the ATI card. I suggest you get ATI MMC software installed or buy a new card like a Hauppauge PVR-series or the ATI 650 capture card. The Hauppauge PVR cards will have better support.Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about -
Originally Posted by edDV
Sigh.
The Roxio settings only offer HQ, SP, and LP (8, 6, and 4 MBps I gather.) The card IS an ATI 650, but if I can't install the software, I can't set the bitrate.
Ah well, thanks to all who've offered their help. I'll post an update if I resolve anything.
- charles -
I think ATI AIW software is quite dated and since you have Vista, you might have to be logged in as administrator, and disable driver signing. Even then I bet you will have compatibility issues with Vista.
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