| 22 Dec 2004 06:38 am |
stratman Guest | Please can anyone tell me how to solve this problem.
I am converting and burning .avi files to DVD using Nero but most are turning out with audio lag of around 1 second. This is most annoying as it makes the movies look like japanese dubbed films. Has anyone else had this problem or can anyone offer a solution please ?
Codecs seem fine I have all the usual codecs and the Nimo Lite Pack installed. I am running an Athlon 64 3.0ghz processor with bags of memory. Sound is taken care of by a SB Live.
Any ideas ?
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| 22 Dec 2004 10:50 am |
run Guest | vsoDivxToDVD converts avi ect to dvd well i like to burn them with dvd santa winavi good program too lets do most files to dvd including them stupid mkv files
probaly best to save the film to hard disk if iwsh to use nero bruning str8 to dvd offten gives lag have no idea if progrmas mentined are free where on my pc when i bought it best if wish to use nero to convert with NeroVision Express i belive there is demo version on site and when has done use nero showtime to view first dvd file then see if is in synch
hope helps
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| 15 Jan 2005 05:41 pm |
guest Guest | i have the same problem, with some small files there are no lags but over 700mb(avi) to dvd produces lags please help!!!! winavi produces even bigger lags than nero vision express 3.
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| 18 Jan 2005 12:05 am |
Entree Rep: 0 Joined: 17 Jan 2005 Posts: 5 OFFLINE | I just posted about this too. I’m completely stumped. I FINALLY get it burning to the DVD then the audio does’t match up with the Video!!! I’ve gone through 4 DVD-r’s trying to fix this problem too. Hopefully someone knows how to fix this problem, SOON!!!
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| 18 Jan 2005 10:14 pm |
Entree Rep: 0 Joined: 17 Jan 2005 Posts: 5 OFFLINE | I called a local video store here in town and the guy said that when converting to DVD format from MPEG analog, frames get dropped in the process. Although I can watch the burned DVD just fine in my Windows Media on my computer, weird but on a DVD playing on a DVD player the audio laps happens. So I’m now going to check into buying a VHS/DVD burner. The guy said one of those won’t cause audio laps since it’s burned straight to the DVD. I know there expensive so I might wait till they come down in price some. I’m not in that much of a rush anyway. I’ll check out places like Best Buy or Circuit City to find the best deal.
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| 24 Jan 2005 12:52 pm |
Simon Guest | This is a common problem. Windows Player can read the header data and work out the delay. There are a few solutions offered in the forum section of videohelp.com. I am currently demuxing the file before I burn it to DVD and this solves the problem there is a surprising amount of freeware available for this.
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| 30 Jan 2005 05:03 am |
Tim Guest | This is the first time this problem has happened to me. And it is the first time I have converted one whole file to DVD. Usually the movies I burn are in to parts (i.e 1of2 & 2of2). Maybe therefore its better to burn to DVD with two combining files??
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| 31 Jan 2005 12:46 pm |
Simon Guest | That might be memory but I doubt it, besides it’s not a solution that will work for everybody.
You can download a trial version of videoredo which has an audio synch function that will fix this problem, or you can donwload virtualdub to seperate the audio file, or tmpgenc to seperate demux the audio and video and compare the files.
I believe the most common problem I’ve seen in the forums is an mpeg file is starting synchronised and then as the time passes the sound is before the video. Videoredo is easy but will cost $$, I suggest the other programs, but if they’ve got you scratching your head, do visit some videohelp forums, first. This is a big time annoyance, good luck.
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| 31 Jan 2005 05:51 pm |
guest Guest | I posted earlier, 3rd one, use TMPGEnc XPress v3, takes ages but it is perfect. Very useful program, can be used to convert to dvd, vcd, svcd, avi etc and also easy to set the size of the final file. Download it now!!!!
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| 21 Mar 2005 08:43 am |
andy Guest | Hey I just did a project for one of my classes where i had to make a movie about a topic. I filmed it on a normal 8mm tape on my home video camera, it worked fine. I hooked up the camera to the computer and edited out my video and added sound clips and did everything i wanted to do. Before i burned it to a dvd i watched it on the computer and everything was fine. I burned it to a DVD and watched it on my dvd player and the sound was off about 5 seconds and continued getting worse. I used a dvd+r and burned at 2.5 x using sonic my dvd program. can someone PLEASE help me find out how to get the sound right when i burn it to a dvd. i saved the project and it plays fine without burning on a dvd someone help!!
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| 21 Mar 2005 12:36 pm |
Simon Guest | It sounds fine on your computer because the software you are using can read the delay in the header of your file. A stand alone DVD player won’t do this. If the solutions posted in the thread above don’t work for you. I suggest downloading ReJig; this is a free program, which will identify and correct the delay before authoring.
http://www.afterdawn.com/software/video_software/video_tools/rejig.cfm
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| 22 Mar 2005 06:55 pm |
That Boy Jrock Guest | Well Im a Beginer and i need help..BAD! I bought a sony dvd burner and installed it in my computer.DRU-530A..if it matters. I Was succesfull once with burning a dave chappelle clip..but so far no such luck. I download avi files off of bearshare and try to burn them to a dvd-rw or dvd-r disc. Can anyone tell me why their not working? i’ve hade a few people tell me a have to change it to dvd player format but i don’t know which program(s) i should use. someone please help!!! EMAIL ME jperk2300@yahoo.com
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| 28 Mar 2005 04:14 pm |
TGar Guest | Your mistake was in buying a Sony product. Mine simply would NOT burn anything with video(95% of the time). I found out that the firmware was the culprit as they’re programed to protect Sony’s best interest in the market; they will only burn on Sony CDRs(I prefer TDK CDRs since Sonys become unreadable after a year or two). I replaced it with a noname burner at about 1/3 the price and have no more problems. Same is true with home DVD players. All of the brand-name players I tried would only play store-bought vids; would never play my VCDs, SVCDs, or JPG files. Go buy yourself a $35 noname(CyberHome is what I eventually went with) and it will play EVERYTHING; a noname burner will burn ANYTHING.
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| 20 Apr 2005 09:41 pm |
robyn shearwood Guest | Can anyone help me please When I burn to DVD from Mini DV periodically the audio goes quieter and the vocals seem to echo - when I listen to the footage through my computer its fine and when I watch the footage from the tape and through my camera onto the television it is fine - but when it comes to burning to the DVD I get small breaks in audio, goes quieter and echos. Please help me its driving me nuts and I have so much work to be done.
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| 21 Apr 2005 01:47 pm |
simonrene Guest | What is the format of your footage, file type etc, when you listen on the computer? And how do you create your DVD?
If you post, I can at least provide some software tips. Here is a good link to someone with a similar problem:
http://www.videohelp.com/forum/archive/t257186.html
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| 10 Jun 2005 05:01 pm |
Neo2272 Guest | HEEEEEEEELP MEEEEE!!!!!!
i donwloaded and old 2003 movie called DareDevil cause im dying to watch it, i donwload it but in the begning the audio is fine - but like 10 mins into it i get a 12 sec audio lag!
the video keeps playing - but some one talks and the ound comes 12 secs later - it starts all fine in the begining!
HELP- how do i solve this - please help me ive been looking for an answer for AGGGGGES!!
please help me!
hell even e-mail me about it if ya wanna (Ronaldo2727@HotMail.Com)
BUT PLEASE HELP!!!!!
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| 20 Sep 2005 07:31 am |
Gokage Guest | Well I have the same problem. I spent 7 hours learning a new way to convert mkvs with video, audio and subtitles to an avi to burn to dvd, and i ended up wtih this problem. the video plays fine on any media player, except when it’s burned with nerovision express 3. Then it gets that 1 second lag. So i’m oging to try to remove 1 sec from the beginning of the audio file and rejoin it with the original video and see what happens.
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| 20 Sep 2005 03:39 pm |
Gokage Guest | Oh my god i’m a GENUS! (
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| 23 Nov 2005 07:27 am |
Mopar Guest | heres soem possibilities for ya..
1. after you encode to dvd burn your dvd in nero burning rom as a DVD-UDF
2. there may be even half a second more audio than video or vice-versa and that will cause sync issues.
3. The info about the header ppl have mentioned is true so try burning your dvd using the prog you encoded with as most have this feature.
4. its an extra step, but try encoding to mpeg1/2 first then use your auth prog to make the dvd
5. if your source audio is VBR try converting it to CBR first using Vdub and set the bitrate to 192 using LameMP3
6. if you set winavi or other prog to auto chapter, be sure the chapters are inserted in I frames only as B and P frames cannot accept a chapter mark.
7. IMO dont use nero to make your dvd’s, i know its easy to use but its notorious for audio troubles.
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| 23 Nov 2005 03:52 pm |
Talisdream Guest | I also have this problem burning to DVD with Nero Vision Express 3 - the menu music is not there on most DVD players, but it is on a few others. Also, the audio lags behind the picture.
HOWEVER...
The latter ONLY occurs if the avi is converted to MPEG2 by Nero (either during a straight burn, or saved to hard drive first).
ie.If I use the SAME avi and create the MPEG2 in a different program, Nero burns it OK! So Nero doesn’t seem to like its own MPEG2s...
Hope this info help people arrive at a solution?
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