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Originally Posted by SheffUK26
I realise that I could take off the audio and multiplex after but it all takes time.
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Encoding audio and video together with tmpgenc add 10% to the encoding time. Doing it by hand separately take the same time for a much better quality. Do your choice
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I want a tool thats basically heres the file and click fit to CD button and click encode and thats it..
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That's not a problem.
Did you just CHECKED that when you added the video, the muxing mode was set to "VCD non compliant" or "SuperVideo CD" ? Your problem can come from that, as explained by muhali3. Just check that point before to save tour project (or to run the job)
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Just checked and it was 2.59 @ work.. dont know what its problem is bloody thing!!
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2.59 as a bug that prevent it to mux in "non compliant" even if you chose it ! And as told just above, KVCD
must be muxed in non compliant mode.
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Does higher res meen better quality but hardser to get more stuff on a cd so in turn you have to lessen quality.. which wud mean whats point , so use normal res.. if that makes sense
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The higher is the resolution, the sharper is the result. And a sharpen image is more pleasant for the eye. But you are right : you must do a compromize between big resolution and low quality.
The idea is to start by the highest resolution (544*480 if your player handle it) and find the CQ with CQmatic. If the CQ is below 60 (or even 65 if you want real good quality), then go to the resolution just udner (480*480) and restart the process... and so on until ytou have a CQ that is above 65.
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And also, uk, PAL template, I was under the assumption that was all uk TVs could view so anything else would be distorted, wouldnt work etc, Am i wrong in saying that.
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Not at all. In fact 90% of material sold in Europe can handle NTSC also. TV, DVD, VCR... (at least in playback mode, not in recording).
The opposite : most of what is sold in USA can't do other thing than NTSc
Cheers Lads/Lasses[/quote]