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Activity Forums Apple Final Cut Pro Legacy DVD Studio Pro

  • Posted by Oliver Mancebo on November 22, 2006 at 9:47 pm

    i have composed a project using dvd studio pro and am having problems with a clip on the formated disc.
    the clip looks jumpy and or with highly visual interlaceing issues. when i previewed the project with in dvd sp the the clip looks fine. as well as the compiled video ts folder all look good. the problems only show up on the burned disc. i have already used compressor to to create the mpeg file at a high bit rate elimanating the need for dvd sp to do the encoding. when i run the build, all the final vob files look good. i have tested the media in vlc and apples dvd player, non show the problem before i burn. i have gone as far as rebuilding the project in IMOVIE and still have the same jumpy problems on the one file. the source for all the media have come from other dvds, yet only one file shows this issue.
    i have read on the forums that users have had similar issues with the menu clip, but the clip is not part of the menu. the button is last on the menu screen but the vob file shows up as 3 in the video ts folder.
    any help would greatly be appreciated

    Bill Kelly replied 19 years, 5 months ago 3 Members · 4 Replies
  • 4 Replies
  • Michael Sacci

    November 22, 2006 at 11:59 pm

    is the problem of the finished disc viewable on a computer or just a TV, it just a TV it is a field order issue. It should show up in FCP if you have a tube TV connected to it.

  • Oliver Mancebo

    November 23, 2006 at 12:58 am

    the problem is only viewable on the finished disc on a commercial dvd player and TV. i play the same disc on the computer and the problem is gone. if it is a field order issue how do i go about reversing the fields?

  • Michael Sacci

    November 23, 2006 at 1:13 am

    I recommend recapturing or encode it but that depends on where it went your. The only way to catch this is to view it on a TV especially in FCP.

  • Bill Kelly

    November 23, 2006 at 10:26 am

    Just a thought. You may have set your encoding bit rate too high. Some commercial DVD players have issues with high bit rates over 7.0, especially with fast motion parts of the video. Try encoding with a maximum bit rate of 6.5 and see if you get better results.

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