WyldeF1r3
10th December 2002, 01:32
I've muxed several files before and had no problems, so when this happened I was rather surprised. I downloaded the new OggMux (0.9.4.1) and muxed a file. There were two audio tracks, a Japanese and an English. The Japanese track plays fine, but the English track seems to be plaxed at a x2/x3 tempo increase, making it sound like Alvin and the chipmunks did the voices. I then listened to the wav, and the ogg file, neither sounded this way, they sounded the way they should. Then I tried muxing in OggMux 0.9.4 (which I have done all my past muxing in without problem) and the problem occurs again.
I'm not sure why this happened or if it can even be called a "bug" since it only caused an error in 1 of the 2 tracks and has never happened before today. The English track was the 2nd track I loaded both times (and always is when I mux two tracks).
Does anyone have any idea what might be wrong? I'm completely stumped
[edit]
I tried muxing the tracks in reverese oreder, and the English track then played fine, but the Japanese audio played at half speed. So it apparently only affects the 2nd track.
I don't know if it has any bearing on the problem but the Japanese track is a 3_2 stereo mix and the English audio is a 2_0. Both were encoded from ac3 to wav in BeSweet, then from wav to ogg in OggDrop.
I'm not sure why this happened or if it can even be called a "bug" since it only caused an error in 1 of the 2 tracks and has never happened before today. The English track was the 2nd track I loaded both times (and always is when I mux two tracks).
Does anyone have any idea what might be wrong? I'm completely stumped
[edit]
I tried muxing the tracks in reverese oreder, and the English track then played fine, but the Japanese audio played at half speed. So it apparently only affects the 2nd track.
I don't know if it has any bearing on the problem but the Japanese track is a 3_2 stereo mix and the English audio is a 2_0. Both were encoded from ac3 to wav in BeSweet, then from wav to ogg in OggDrop.