Hi all,
I'll admit I haven't tinkered with this encoder in quite a while, but I DO remember Windows Media and other media players being able to decode my videos back in the day when I was testing. Not only that, but my TV's media player won't recognize it either.
Can someone more knowledgeable and experienced with this encoder take a look at my specs and see where I went wrong here?
Thanks
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 24 of 24
-
-
640x480 is no DVD Video compatible resolution.
Furthermore, HCEnc will create pure m2v video. You may want to multiplex it into a container (ProgramStream or TransportStream variants), together with your audio stream, which will be recognized better by your player.
To watch it on your PC, you may want to install LAV Filters or use a player which does not depend on system wide installed decoders but uses an own collection to be independent (VLC, MPC-HC, MPC-BE ...). -
I corrected the issue by removing the resize command line from my script. I re-encoded and still face the same issue.
-
So what exactly is your issue? Players don't detect pure, containerless M2V?
-
Yes, but why won't Windows Media Player play a simple Mpeg2 video? That's my issue. And my question. AVSPmod won't read it either.
-
That doesn't sound right. If HEnc makes legit Mpeg2 files, why would I have to now take an additional step after encoding to make it compatible with other media that should really play such an old format to begin with?
-
As was explained earlier, some players have problems with the m2v elementary stream
-
.m2v is not the same as .mpg either create .mpg or go with .mp4 video, even most older players will attempt to play that.
--
"a lot of people are better dead" - prisoner KSC2-303 -
Windows doesn't know that m2v files (mpeg 2 elementary streams) contain MPEG 2 video. WMP also can't deal with it. It needs to be muxed into an MPG (mpeg 2 program stream) container.
-
HC-Enc does make compliant M2V files. Your problem is you're trying to play it with a useless player - Windows Media Player. It doesn't come with the needed codec. Use a real player, such as the ones LigH.de suggested. MPC-HC (the one I use) has no problem with M2V video files.
I think installing ffdshow will also fix your problem. -
I'm encoding to Mpeg2 because it's an Mpeg2 video in the first place . When I try to re-encode to x264, my color levels are out of whack (bright, washed-out looking video)
-
Long ago I used to use the old free version of TMPGEnc to mux m2v (and AC3) into MPG (File -> MPEG Tools...). These days I use ffmpeg (though I rarely have the need).
Though it's not a good practice, just renaming the .m2v file with an .mpg extension might be enough for your TV to play it.
Then you're doing it wrong. -
You can also make a real MPG out of it using ImagoMPEG-Muxer. I'm not entirely sure whether or not you need an audio track.
-
Then you're doing it wrong.
However, on my Sharp Roku TV, this "washed out'' look isn't an issue. This TV handles SD gradients well, though.
Any thoughts? -
Wait, WHAT? I thought it was pointless to do this with SD material (720X480). I could have sworn I read in these threads for years that this did not improve on the material whatsoever. and that upscaling, in fact, resulted in errors. Please explain - I'm intrigued.
-
You said one of your devices doesn't handle SD gradients well but works fine for HD. So I suggested upscaling to HD to avoid that problem.
Similar Threads
-
Problems with Potplayer time bar when playing hvec encoded files
By Rissei in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 0Last Post: 3rd May 2021, 14:43 -
VOB files reporting wrong playing time
By awgie in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 23Last Post: 18th Mar 2021, 07:32 -
Playing blu-ray discs on VLC? (What am I doing wrong?)
By gastrof in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 8Last Post: 28th Dec 2018, 05:35 -
Creating a video with certain specs
By Run222 in forum MacReplies: 7Last Post: 21st Mar 2018, 19:04 -
best PC specs for HD video capture?
By clashradio in forum ComputerReplies: 0Last Post: 23rd Jan 2018, 20:37