Welcome to Doom9's Forum, THE in-place to be for everyone interested in DVD conversion. Before you start posting please read the forum rules. By posting to this forum you agree to abide by the rules. Domains: forum.doom9.org / forum.doom9.net / forum.doom9.se |
|
|
#1 | Link |
|
Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2002
Posts: 1
|
Time and space of encoding
hi.I 've tried once to make a movie in SVCD with DVD2SVCD v. 1.0.9 b3.i've start the process at 00:30 and at 13:00 the CCE still working at 11%,saying that it has 15 hours left...and the best...i had 11GB free space and when i stopped the process they have left only 756MB!imagine how space was needed yet!But it can't bwe that way.There something wrong,right?I 've tried to do a small clip before,and i saw that in the dir of the movie it creats many files with the size of the final video with several extentions,VAF,AIFF and others.Especially,the audio file AIFF has 3.67GB space!I don't know what to do.With this,what?you must have 20GB free space?Please help me with this!how many hours does this programs makes the Images for you?(i use I-Author for the final Image,maybe this is the cause?)
|
|
|
|
|
|
#2 | Link |
|
Reloaded!
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: The Matrix
Posts: 824
|
Hi lacta,
welcome to the forum and please read the Quick Guide, the FAQ and Q&A (Q4) as this is already covered not a thousand times but it might get close to that. ![]() Have a look in the advanced forum and see this thread: http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php?s=&threadid=5777 See your machine specs and compare them with some of this thread to see if ther's something wrong with your PC or if it is just "too slow" for a 4-Pass-VBR encode. And yes, you will need about 10-15 GB for a conversion - and please use the defaults at first don't use the "MPEG 5.1" audio option. Why? - Do a search on that topic! ![]() Hope this helps, Gerti
__________________
"We've heard that a million monkeys at a million keyboards could produce the complete works of Shakespeare; now, thanks to the Internet, we know this is not true." - Robert Wilensky, University of California, 1997 |
|
|
|
![]() |
|
|