This is because old tapes sometimes stick and they can lose tracking of the video (affecting the image) and probably also losing audio sync ruining the capture. PS: I forgot to mention that I use a cleaning tape to clean the VCR heads and then fast forward and rewind the tape before the capture. For that you can save as WAV and then convert to AC3 with Sony Foundry Soft Encode or similar. Beware that newer Audition versions (than CC 2015) do not support saving to Dobly Digital. I import the audio file in Adobe Audition for normalizing, save as AC3 and then use IFOedit to create the DVD files. For the frame server of course I send the video and audio data uncompressed and let TMPGenc 2.5 to create the elementary streams (m2v and mp2). I then use IFOedit to create the DVD files from the video (m2v) and the audio files. I import the audio file in Adobe Audition for normalization and save as AC3 (Dolby Digital) or MP2 (MPEG). The audio is uncompressed PCM which I then demux with Avidemux in a separate WAV file. The final compression will be with TMPGEnc, so in VirtualDub I either produce a very good quality master to import to TMPGenc 5, or start the frame server and import that in TMPGEnc 2.5 For the master I use x265vfw compression with at least 2500 kbps bitrate which is essentially lossless. After that I use VirtualDub to deinterlace the video and then crop the visible tracking lines at the bottom and resize to 720x576 (PAL DVD). list of frames that need adjusting, and say how many pixels to shift the. Failing that, there is certainly a VirtualDub filter which can fix this, its called Frame Tweaker (tweaker.vdf). The way I do it is capture the video in Huffyuv or M-JPEG with little compression. > (TBC) or a capture device with TBC functionality. I have a much better handle now on using virtualdub. I'm really glad I asked all these questions, and I think everyone for their help. OK, I just got Enter to work with virtualdub2. Skiller, I got the stop and start to work with the space bar, but not 'Enter'. The dub seems to come on every time a file is played. But, I swear, I could do it before with no audio issues.Īnd, you're right, Alwyn. I'm just having problems reviewing it with virtualdub. When I play it for review with VLC I can see that I'm capturing and editing a good digitized video, ready to convert to h.264. The problem is really moot at this point. Still, even in virtualdub2 "splutter, coughs" and the other thing. I tried different settings, "Play the file uncompressed" and I bumped up the 'Processing thread priority'. Some short sections of the audio are OK, but, sooner or later I get the cutting out, skipping effect, stuttering.Īlso, I tried both virtualdub and virtualdub2, and it did the same thing. The video is actually fine, it's the audio that skips out. OK, after watching my AVI video on VLC and it was great, I loaded the same file back into Virtualdub 1.9.11. Oh, yeah! Your suggestion is GREAT! It works much more the way I want it too. I just watched that episode on YouTube the other day.
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