1. This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Learn More.

DivX Mpg4 to SVCD - choping the file into two

Discussion in 'Video - Software discussion' started by loopz, Feb 28, 2002.

  1. loopz

    loopz Member

    Joined:
    Feb 28, 2002
    Messages:
    18
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    11
    ok...after many hours scaning various forums i decided to jump in the deep
    end and try and convert a DIVX MPG4 AVI file i downloaded into SVCD for
    playing back on my DVD.

    I managed to convert the DivX MPEG-4 DVD Video Decompressor file into (i
    think) SVCD. Only my WINDVD will play the file now and i dont seem to have
    lost the sound or quality. so far so good.

    The file has grown from approx 720 Meg to 1.6 Gig. I decided that i needed
    to split it so i can burn it to two 800 meg cds. So again i had a good read
    and got totally confused.

    I then read that i could just use AVI2MPG2 (bbMPEG) to convert the original
    AVI file to two MPG2 files (SVCD format). I followed a guide which wasnt
    very clear and started the process off. Alas...it has been running for
    nearly 24 hours and its due to finish tomorrow. I have to ask the question.
    is what i am doing correct ? and is there an idiot guide to converting the
    AVI into 2 MPG2 files ready for a SVCD burn ?

    thanx for your time :)
     
  2. jnihil

    jnihil Moderator Staff Member

    Joined:
    Dec 23, 2001
    Messages:
    742
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    26
    i haven't tried this with svcd mpeg2, but tmpgenc has a file splitting tool under the one of its menus. I have tried it for VCD mpeg1 in the past and works real fast. may be worth a try.
     
  3. dRD

    dRD I hate titles Staff Member

    Joined:
    Jun 10, 1999
    Messages:
    8,312
    Likes Received:
    191
    Trophy Points:
    143
    TMPGEnc's MPEG-2 splitting hangs every now and then, but its definately your best bet. Other way is to encode AVI directly to 2 separate MPEG-2s using TMPGEnc and its source range selection (select first half of the frames for first clip and rest for the second).
     

Share This Page