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  1. im not too good at making svcds/vcds...... anyway, i use tmpg to make my svcds, but when i burn them and play them on my dvd player, the movie, NOT THE AUDIO studders at times..... can someone please help me avoid this problem???
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  2. Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2002
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    You could've selected the wrong field order or you could've burn your file at a very high speed.



    Hope That Helps!!! :P
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  3. Member
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    Nov 2001
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    Sweet Home Alabama USA
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    Another stutter possibility is that you encoded your output to 16:9. This makes all Apex players I have tried stutter.
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  4. so should i burn it at 8x or lower?

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    i did encode it at 16:9.......i have a SAMSUNG 301 dvdplayer, what should i encode it at to avoid stuttering?
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  5. Originally Posted by TheeNotoriousOnee
    so should i burn it at 8x or lower?

    ___________________________________________

    i did encode it at 16:9.......i have a SAMSUNG 301 dvdplayer, what should i encode it at to avoid stuttering?
    4x max burn

    just to avoid confusion, i think Digifreak stated that if you set your OUTPUT video to 16:9, instead of 4:3 for standard TVs that it may also cause stuttering w/ Apex players....if you set your SOURCE aspect ratio as 16:9, then it wouldn't matter in this case about the stuttering
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  6. Member
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    Sweet Home Alabama USA
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    Don't know if your player is 16:9 DAR flag compatible, many are not. To test it, set your output to 4:3 (keep input settings the same) and encode and burn a short sample. If it doesn't stutter, then the 16:9 DAR flag is your problem. If it still stutters, you may need to swap field orders if the source is interlaced. If it is a progressive source, make sure you have 3:2 pulldown for output. If the 4:3 output test plays OK, to correct this, encode settings will depend on your source and what you are watching it on. Here are some scenarios:

    Source 16:9, TV is 16:9 or TV is 4:3 with 16:9 enhanced mode, encode 4:3 source and 4:3 output. This will display on your TV with correct aspect but will have incorrect aspect on PC.

    Source 16:9, TV is 4:3, encode 16:9 source and 4:3 output. This will add black bars to the top and bottom of the encode and give the 16:9 movie the correct aspect on your 4:3 TV as well as your PC.

    Source is 4:3, TV is 4:3, set both source and output to 4:3. This will give the correct aspect on 4:3 TV and PC.

    Source is 4:3, TV is 16:9, encode source and output both at 4:3 and use the 4:3 mode on your 16:9 TV. This will not display with the correct aspect on PC.
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