- #Tmpgenc authoring works 5 open 1080 hd 720p#
- #Tmpgenc authoring works 5 open 1080 hd mp4#
- #Tmpgenc authoring works 5 open 1080 hd full#
- #Tmpgenc authoring works 5 open 1080 hd pro#
- #Tmpgenc authoring works 5 open 1080 hd software#
As mentioned, I can select the AVCHD for DVD but then the resolution is either 720p or 1080. What I was hoping was to be able to encode and author/burn disc straight to AVCHD Disc in Magix. I left the deinterlacing to the Television to handle since I think that it does a good job.
#Tmpgenc authoring works 5 open 1080 hd software#
Using the file created with the said software I can then load it into TMPG Authoring Works and make a AVCHD disc onto DVD that will be playable on my Bluray Player, using the Created 720x576i. I understand that upscaling to HD is not a good idea.
#Tmpgenc authoring works 5 open 1080 hd pro#
Using Premiere Pro with The TMPGenc AVCHD for DVD Preset then I can get a good enough quality at 4mbps even. I can get a good 2hours good quality Footage very comfi at around 8mbps but for most times The reason for not just going with MPEG-2 as said Scenestealer mentioned. I don't know if you know but SD 576i and 576p arei both supported in the AVCHD 1.0 Format. The Footage is Just Standard 4:3 720x576interlaced. I am wanting to put Standard Mini DV-AVI (VHS) captured via my Canopus ADVC-100 to Disc using the AVCHD Format. So if anyone has a direct link for it then that would be good, so I can contact Magix Directly. I think that the support form that I managed to find last time to fill in is somewhere in there still but can't seem to locate it? I was looking to contact Magix direct but could seem to find the form to fill in just many FAQs. I Think that Scenestealer is more in touch with what I am wanted to do. You could Up Res to HD in MEP but most of us have come to the conclusion that modern TV's do a better job of (hardware) upscaling than the editing software so best to just burn it as SD if it were filmed in SD. You could play around with a lot more parameters in MC if you are au fait with that, like 2 pass, Target quality, different Rate Controls, etc.
#Tmpgenc authoring works 5 open 1080 hd full#
You could fit far more material on a Bluray than on an MPEG2 encoded DVD by using AVC H.264 encoded at healthy SD bitrates (the 30min limitation Jeff is referring to is for Full HD bitrates).ĥ. You can set higher AC-3 Audio bitrates with MC (than with the Intel encoder).Ĥ. You are not transcoding to MPEG2 DVD which is a lower quality less efficient codec.ģ. you are not limited by the maximum 9800kbps bitrate of DVD.Ģ. I could see a benefit for you (theoretically - I have not tried it) in that you could potentially create a higher quality SD Disc using AVCHD than with (MPEG2) DVD, and using the MC codec because:-ġ.
#Tmpgenc authoring works 5 open 1080 hd mp4#
MP4 encodes fine Software only, and is much quicker than the Intel encoder SW only. MP4 and not with AVCHD Transport Stream so it would be entirely suitable for what you are proposing.
The zero byte bug only occurs with HWA encoding to. How is any program to know which pixels need to be added, and where? It is not sufficient merely to "duplicate" pixels.Īlthough you cannot "increase the resolution" of your source footage you can make some attempt at "improving" it, e.g., by means of Sharpening and/or the use of a plugin like NeatVideo (to remove or at least reduce "picture noise").įorum opinion differs to and as I have used the MC encoder for many years as it used to be the default encoder in MEP and have had good results. To do so, "additional pixels" must be created and added to each individual frame. There is a quite common misconception that it is possible to increase the resolution of a given video file. It is entirely possible that your TV is carrying out some degree of upscaling, but that is a wholly different thing. It is, and will always remain, Standard Definition it can never be the High Definition that AVCHD offers! Not forgetting that the maximum playback time of an AVCHD DVD is about 30 minutes. Why do you wish to export SD 720 x 576 to AVCHD DVD? Your blu-ray player can play a standard DVD without problem and there is really no visual benefit at all in attempting to upscale your source video. However, I think there is a more "serious" issue inherent in your post. It is now quite "old" and, when users have attempted to use it whilst creating mp4 files and using Hardware Acceleration, the result is (almost) always a file of zero bytes! I have it installed on my computer but I honestly can't remember the last time I actually used it. However, I have to say that purchasing the MainConcept codec is highly unlikely to enable you to achieve any improvement to your footage. Hence no-one from Magix will reply to you! Your previous post to the forum, from 2018, you were advised that these are user to user forums, so not a contact for any Magix staff.