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  1. Should I capture my sound at 44khz or 48khz if my final goal is to create a CVD ?

    Thanks
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  2. Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2002
    Location
    United States of America
    Search Comp PM
    If you want to store the CVD on a DVD-R someday, select 48000Hz. :P
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  3. Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2002
    Location
    United States of America
    Search Comp PM
    If you only want to burn on CD-R, select 41000Hz.


    Hope That Helps!!! :P
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  4. The Old One SatStorm's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2000
    Location
    Hellas (Greece), E.U.
    Search Comp PM
    Officially, CVD use 44100 audio, the same with SVCD.
    Many users (including me) are having flexible DVD standalones, capable to support xCVD/xSVCD. Cheak if yours is flexible enough, and if it is, use 48000kh/z if one day you wish to transfer your creations to DVD-R.
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  5. Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2002
    Location
    United States of America
    Search Comp PM
    Yeah, if your DVD player is as flexible as SatStorm says, select 48000Hz for everything you do (VCDs, SVCDs, CVDs, etc.)! :P
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  6. I'm having a question relating to this issue and am wondering if someone has an idea about how to resolve it...

    In TMPGEnc, when I encode using the standard SVCD template, the resulting MPG file has both audio and video and they work fine and I can burn to CD-R and play on my computer.

    However, when I encode using the CVD template, the MPG file has no audio. I've done a lot of tests and have found out that if I load the CVD template, then change from 2-pass VBR to CBR (but leave everything else the same), then encode, the audio is OK.

    So it seems that the only thing causing the audio to disappear is the 2-pass VBR setting in TMPGEnc. Has anyone run across this problem? Know how to fix it?
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