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  1. Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2002
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    Toronto, Canada
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    I got this great quality DVD rip and weh I try to open it in VirtualDub I message pops up with the title:
    VBR audio stream detected

    VirtualDub has detected an improper VBR audio encoding in the source AVI file and will rewrite the audio header with standard CBR values during processing for better compatibility. This may introduce up to 13819 ms of skew from the video stream. If this is unacceptable, decompress the *entire* audio stream to an uncompressed WAV file and recompress with a constant bitrate encoder. (bitrate: 121.1 +- 15.8 kbps)

    What should I do next?
    I really need your opinion on this one guys

    THanks
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  2. Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2002
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    BATON ROUGE, LA - U.S.A.
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    on the audio tab, choose 'full processing mode', then on the audio tab choose 'compression'. on the pop up screen, select '<no compression(pcm)>' and press ok.

    option one-
    now on the file tab, select 'save as wave' , then encode the wave in sound forge or other encodig program at a constant bitrate of 224(or what you want) now open the video and on the audio tab select 'wav audio' and select the newly encoded wave. select direct stream copy in both the audio and video tabs. then on the file tab, select save avi.

    option two-
    if you will be encoding this file later, just select save direct stream copy on the video tab, and select save as avi under the file tab.
    Where I walk, I walk alone. Where I fight, I fight alone.
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  3. Member
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    Sep 2002
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    Toronto, Canada
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    ok I'll try that out

    thanks
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  4. Can I ask you a simple question? What are you trying to do with your video, apart from opening it up in Virtualdub?

    Cos if it plays fine and all you want to do is play it on your machine, you don t need to do anything. If on the other hand you are trying to convert it to another format (VCD, SVCD) then it s another matter.

    Here s how I deal with VBR MP3 encoding in Vdub when I want to output to VCD: use the MP3 freeze version of Virtual Dub to save the audio as audio.mp3, then use dbPowerAmp (it s free) to convert the audio to uncompressed PCM 44hz, then use the resulting (huge) wav file together with the original video as source for the encoding in TMPGEnc. Results are perfect that way, but then again I don t know if that s what you are trying to achieve.

    Cheers
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  5. Member
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    Sep 2002
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    Toronto, Canada
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    I'm trying to make a VCD

    and since you already told me what you do when making VCD I guess I should try the same

    Thanks
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  6. Banned
    Join Date
    Dec 2002
    Location
    Somewhere I belong
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    Originally Posted by aguillon
    Can I ask you a simple question? What are you trying to do with your video, apart from opening it up in Virtualdub?

    Cos if it plays fine and all you want to do is play it on your machine, you don t need to do anything. If on the other hand you are trying to convert it to another format (VCD, SVCD) then it s another matter.

    Here s how I deal with VBR MP3 encoding in Vdub when I want to output to VCD: use the MP3 freeze version of Virtual Dub to save the audio as audio.mp3, then use dbPowerAmp (it s free) to convert the audio to uncompressed PCM 44hz, then use the resulting (huge) wav file together with the original video as source for the encoding in TMPGEnc. Results are perfect that way, but then again I don t know if that s what you are trying to achieve.

    Cheers
    Why save it to mp3,why not just save it to wave?And how do you know if itīs mp3 sound on the movie?
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