anarco
18th April 2002, 10:37
Hi, Iīm not sure if this problem has already been covered I couldnīt find anything corresponding in the forum.
I recenctly tried to convert a divx to sVCD.
Luckily I checked the BINīs before burning and I encountered that
the audio plays two times faster than the video.( so the second bin is almost without audio)
I tried to encode it manually with besweet... same problem (also by using the newest besweet version) and regardless to the parameters.
I thought it might be the framerate conversion but it doesnīt matter if I give framerate conversion parameters or not :(
the original parameters were
"BeSweet.exe" -core( -input "D:\convert\corrupt\Encoded_audio_1.mp2.wav" -output "D:\convert\CORRUPT\Encoded_audio_1.mp2" -logfile "D:\convert\CORRUPT\Encoded_audio_1.log" ) -ota( -g max -r 960 1001 ) -ssrc( --rate 44100 ) -2lame( -e -b 224 -m s )
but this:
"d:\convert\corrupt\BeSweet.exe" -core( -input "d:\convert\corrupt\Encoded_audio_1.mp2.wav" -output "d:\convert\corrupt\dorks.mp2" ) -2lame( )
turns out the same problem
the movie (mpv) file is 100:47 minutes the audio ends up with 50:23
The audio in the original avi seems to be mp3
8k/sec / 48 khz / mono.
Thats actually what windows file information says ;)
anarco
I recenctly tried to convert a divx to sVCD.
Luckily I checked the BINīs before burning and I encountered that
the audio plays two times faster than the video.( so the second bin is almost without audio)
I tried to encode it manually with besweet... same problem (also by using the newest besweet version) and regardless to the parameters.
I thought it might be the framerate conversion but it doesnīt matter if I give framerate conversion parameters or not :(
the original parameters were
"BeSweet.exe" -core( -input "D:\convert\corrupt\Encoded_audio_1.mp2.wav" -output "D:\convert\CORRUPT\Encoded_audio_1.mp2" -logfile "D:\convert\CORRUPT\Encoded_audio_1.log" ) -ota( -g max -r 960 1001 ) -ssrc( --rate 44100 ) -2lame( -e -b 224 -m s )
but this:
"d:\convert\corrupt\BeSweet.exe" -core( -input "d:\convert\corrupt\Encoded_audio_1.mp2.wav" -output "d:\convert\corrupt\dorks.mp2" ) -2lame( )
turns out the same problem
the movie (mpv) file is 100:47 minutes the audio ends up with 50:23
The audio in the original avi seems to be mp3
8k/sec / 48 khz / mono.
Thats actually what windows file information says ;)
anarco