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How do I burn .avi's to a CD or DVD

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[Quote] #1
31 Oct 2005 08:15 pm
connor
Guest
Im not lying when I say this. I am pretty well educated on burning, mounting, various things...anything. But theres always been one pain in my ass. Burning .avi’s. ppl always say like get Winavi etc. and you’re set. Well you’re really not. I followed the instructions on a previous post and when I put my DVD into my DVD player I was so happy, but not after realizing there was no sound. So ppl plz help. These are the instructions i previously followed:

How to convert an AVI or MPEG into a playable DVD
— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —

Needed Apps:

Virtual Dub
TMPGEnc Plus
TMPG DVD Author:
NERO Burning ROM or Nero Express.


For AVI start here, if you have an MPG or MPEG file skip to step 5

Because most downloaded avi video have improper VBR audio encoding
you need to do a quick audio header rewrite with this app. (ETA 1
min)

1. Open your .avi file in Virtual Dub

2. If you get a message saying “VirtualDub has detected an improper
VBR audio encoding in the source AVI and will rewrite.....etc” then
hit OK and continue to step 3, if you did not recieve this message,
you can close VirtualDub and procede to step 5

3. Under the Video Menu choose “Direct Stream Copy”.

4. Under File choose “Save as AVI..." and save the fixed file back to
your hard drive. When finished close Virtual Dub.

Next we need to encode the video into a suitable format for playing
on your DVD Player. This takes time, but there is no way around it.
(ETA 2-5 hours of encoding time)

5. Open TMPGEnc Plus

6. In the Project Wizard Menu select DVD - NTSC in the left panel and
“CBR Linear PCM Audio” from the drop-down menu and hit NEXT.

7. Choose the Video File and use the default values under Expert
Setting for Source. Hit NEXT.

8. Check “Clip Frame”. The Clip Frame window will open. Hit the
“Arrange Setting” button and choose “Full screen (keep aspect ratio)"
from the Arrange Method menu. (this keeps the video from stretching
out disproportionately. Hit OK. Hit NEXT.

9. The video will default to the highest possible bitrate, if you are
planning on fitting more than one video on a DVD you will need to
adjust the “Estimated File Size” or “Makes file size” percentage to an
amount that will fit your needs. (leave a little room for any DVD menu
graphics you may want.) Hit NEXT.

10. Choose where you would like the encoded file outputted. You can
then select whether you want to encode now or create another project
and run batch mode. Hit OK. Your video will encode now (if your not
batching). This takes time, depending on your system about 2-4 hours
for a full length movie. I suggest running it overnight.

Once your movie is encoded, you will need to AUTHOR your DVD. This
creates those fancy VOB files that the retail DVD’s use. (ETA 5-45
min.)

11. Open TMPGEnc DVD Author and create a new project.

12. Click Add File and select your newly encoded .m2v or .mpg file
you created with TMPGEnc Plus.

13. OPTIONAL: Click “Chapter cut edit” and scroll through to various
points of the movie and click the “Add current frame to chapter”
button at various points so that you can navigate in the movie better
on your DVD player. (Much faster than having to FF through the whole
movie cuz the power went out 3/4 of the way through). Click OK when
finished.

14. Now click “Create Menu” at the top. Use one of the presets or
choose new from the drop down and make your own. Also hit the “Menu
display settings” button to select whether you want the menu to
display or the movie to start automatically.

15. Once your satisfied with your menu, hit “Output” from the top.

16. Choose where you want the final DVD files to output (you’ll need
4GB+ of free space for a full DVD. Click Begin Output.

17. If you have Nero installed on your computer you can then use DVD
Author’s built in DVD Writing Tool and create the disc right after
encoding. Otherwise use your regular DVD burning software to burn the
files as a DVD-Video. (Consult your manual for this)

18. Once burned you’re all set. Test it out in your set-top DVD player!

Good Luck!
[Quote] #2
01 Nov 2005 09:54 pm
connor
Guest
bump..?
[Quote] #3
02 Nov 2005 09:17 am
Regular
Rep: 0thumbs-side

Joined: 10 Aug 2005
Posts: 134
OFFLINE
Hmm..upon reading the instructions, my guess would be that you didn’t encode or mux the audio into the DVD. My reason for thinking so is because the audio hasn’t been addressed, aside from “VBR audio encoding” error in the beginning of the guide.

And speaking of which...

You never indicated whether you received the “improper VBR audio encoding” error message or not. Did you get this?
[Quote] #4
03 Nov 2005 07:58 pm
connor
Guest
no
I never recieved anything
thats why i thought everything went all well
[Quote] #5
04 Nov 2005 04:46 am
Regular
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Joined: 10 Aug 2005
Posts: 134
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Okay, I see.

When encoding with TMPGEnc Plus, make sure that the Audio Source is the same as the Video Source; since you don’t have a seperate audio file to work with.
[Quote] #6
04 Nov 2005 04:35 pm
connor
Guest
kk will try that and respond back
[Quote] #7
05 Nov 2005 01:36 pm
connor
Guest
thx man that seemed to be the problem
it works now
appreicate the help
[Quote] #8
05 Nov 2005 02:50 pm
Regular
Rep: 0thumbs-side

Joined: 10 Aug 2005
Posts: 134
OFFLINE
Glad to help. smiley
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