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How did I burn straight from AVI to VCD without converting using TMPGEnc?

Discussion in 'DivX / XviD' started by sunman, Aug 5, 2003.

  1. sunman

    sunman Member

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    Hi...ok, now I am confused. I am very new at this so please be easy on me. For quite some time now, I have been downlaoding movies off the internet (first off, are the files I download off the internet always referred to as AVI?). Anyway, I have ALWAYS converted these downloaded files using TMPGEnc and then burned to a CD-R as a VCD using Nero. I have no problem playing these in my DVD player. However, for the first time ever today, I ended up burning some downloaded movies directly to CD-R as a VCD WITHOUT first converting using TMPGEnc...and yes, I was able to play these on my DVD player as well. Why did this happen? Not that I mind....I saved a few hours!! :) Also, why am I not able to play this VCD on my computer and only on my DVD player? I hope someone can help me out...I just want to understand.
     
    Last edited: Aug 5, 2003
  2. powerdup

    powerdup Regular member

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    Were you able to play those files before burning it to a disc?

    Im not sure what you did, but about the other problem, download gspot and load the file into the program, itll show you which codecs you need to play the file.
     
  3. sunman

    sunman Member

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    Hi,

    I was able to play them on my media player on my computer (the same application I used to download them from). I just am curious though to know why I was even able to burn directly to VCD...still confused...:)
     
  4. Praetor

    Praetor Moderator Staff Member

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    Two possibilities:
    1. The file was incorrectly labeled as AVI and in fact was a MPG/DAT file
    2. Perhaps you selected for Nero to encode it for you?
     
  5. sunman

    sunman Member

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    Hi,

    I think I found the answer. I think I just got lucky with the files I downloaded in that they were already VCD compliant. No, I definitely know that Nero didn't convert for me because if it did, it must have done it in about 10 seconds as the entire burn process on an 80min CD-R took less than 3 minutes. (and plus, nero tells you when it is converting for you)

    I'd like to hear any other comments.

    Thanks again..
     
  6. Praetor

    Praetor Moderator Staff Member

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    Open up the files with AVICodec.... if im not mistaken VCD compatible files:
    - Video: MPEG1 Codec, 1150KB/s
    - Audio: 44.1Khz, 192kb/s
    - 320x240 @ 29.97/25/23.976
    If that's the case then your file was indeed already VCD compliant
     
  7. sunman

    sunman Member

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    Excellent, I will check that. I guess it just caight me by surprise because I have NEVER downloaded any video that was already compliant. I should note however that the quality sucked while I watched it on my dvd player.:)

     
  8. Praetor

    Praetor Moderator Staff Member

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    Well VCDs arent the best to begin with! :D
     
  9. Dela

    Dela Administrator Staff Member

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    What?? I think they are the best to begin with, for a newbie, then onto SVCD, then dvd-r :)
     

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