Newbie HDTV-to-DVD guide >>

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Newbie HDTV-to-DVD guide

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I've come up with a rough draft for a newbie (written by a newbie for newbies) guide to HDTV to NTSC DVD conversion. I hope to beef it up in the future with diagrams, screen shots, links to referenced software, and updated scripts and or verbage as I learn more from folks here. I wrote it mostly for myself, in case I go into a coma, wake up, with no idea of what I've learned in the past few weeks. Anyway, here it is. All comments, even rude ones, welcomed:

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i have twenties on my powerwheels

fluffy_boulder

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Messages: 4
Registration: 04.12.2002
21.05.20 - 08:49:21
Message # 1
RE: Newbie HDTV-to-DVD guide

In your guide you shouldn't forget ProjectX. I can hardly imagine that VideoReDo can compete with ProjectX as far as demuxing of HDTV transport streams is concerned. It certainly takes care of lost frames to keep audio and video in sync. You can also cut the transport streams within ProjectX, but mpeg2schnitt and Cuttermaran are more comfortable and can be used for demuxed HDTV as well. PVAStrumento should also be quite usable for HDTV transport streams. If you have a suffciently powerful processor in your DVD player (unfortunately the Zoran Vaddis 7 in my Cyberhome CH 462 doesn't have this power) you can also burn the HDTV video without reencoding on a DVD (you probably need double layer media). To this end you use DVDPatcher to deceive the DVD authoring program about the video resolution and proceed in the same way as you burn DVB streams on DVDs without reencoding.

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Leemos

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Registration: 08.30.2002
21.05.20 - 08:56:23
Message # 2
RE: Newbie HDTV-to-DVD guide

My suggestion to the guide is that you'll forget about loading the audio in the Avisynth script. Use the original audio, there's no reason to re-encode. There are tools for cutting the AC3 track if necessary, DelayCut for example. You could also point to some video bitrate calculator.

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1995 Cosmos Black M3 OBDI 3.2L Euro HFM and lots of other stuff to make it faster on open track days. Car is faster than the driver has nerve....

andylv

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Messages: 357
Registration: 07.03.2003
21.05.20 - 09:07:25
Message # 3
RE: Newbie HDTV-to-DVD guide

With regards to the pulldown issue (i.e., after IVTC on telecined HD material), Nic has tentative plans to add pulldown capability to QuEnc which would solve the quandry I have right now. It would allow my process to stay as indicated in the original version of the guide, i.e., mux audio in Avisynth and use QuEnc to generate the final, DVD-compliant (NTSC) MPEG2 file. See

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AdOb0y

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Messages: 43
Registration: 04.26.2003
21.05.20 - 09:14:42
Message # 4
RE: Newbie HDTV-to-DVD guide
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