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Activity Forums Avid Media Composer how do you make better quality avis in avid xpress or what is better than an avi

  • how do you make better quality avis in avid xpress or what is better than an avi

    Posted by Coolrachel on November 30, 2006 at 8:00 pm

    so I want to export an avid file to adobe encore so i can burn it to dvd. Is an avi the best quality for that? my avi that i made was really grainy. Encore wont accept quicktime reference files.

    Melvin Cox replied 19 years, 5 months ago 5 Members · 7 Replies
  • 7 Replies
  • Alex Alexzander

    November 30, 2006 at 8:13 pm

    You would be better off going from Avid to Sorenson for MPEG2 encoding, or some other encoder, and then taking those encoded files to Encore.

    -Alex Alexzander

  • Coolrachel

    November 30, 2006 at 8:32 pm

    I dont have sorenson. I thought encore was a good encoder. Is there a way to encode it for encore within avid?

  • Jon Zanone

    December 1, 2006 at 12:28 pm

    What version of Encore are you running? I thought ver 2.0 accepted QT refs…

    Jon

    “The Almighty tells me He can get me out of this mess. But He’s pretty sure you’re F%$#*D!”

  • David Braswell

    December 1, 2006 at 2:02 pm

    Encore 1.5 will accept ref movies. I’m not sure about Encore 1. What does Encore say when you try to import the movie? Does it grouse about frame rate? I’ve found the best way to prep ref movs for Encore is to mixdown audio and video to 1 track of video and 2 audio. Include any time at the beginning and end where you need black. Then remove any black or filler from the timeline before you export the movie. If you leave filler on the timeline the framerate won’t necessarily be 29.97, and Encore _will_ complain.

  • Melvin Cox

    December 3, 2006 at 2:01 am

    Here is the workflow that I am using. It is time consuming, but produces very professional results.

    01) Open Adobe After Effects
    02) Right click inside the Untitled Project.aep window, select Import -> File
    03) Select the target Reference Movie, press “Open”
    04) File -> Export – > AVI
    05) Enter the name and folder under which the .avi should be saved, press “Save”
    06) Within the AVI Sett

    Video:

    Compression: DV/DVCPRO – NTSC
    Quality: Best
    Frame Rate: 29.97
    Scan Mode: Interlaced
    Aspect Ratio: 4:3

    Audio:

    Format: Uncompressed
    Sample Rate: 48 KHz
    Sample Size: 16
    Channels: 2

    07) Press “OK”

    The resulting .avi file will IMHO be far superior in quality to that output from within Xpress Pro HD.

    Note: Keep in mind the dreaded file size limits (see: https://neuron2.net/LVG/filesize.html)of the .avi format. You may need to utilize segmented .avi’s for long segments.

    Hope this helps!!!

  • Coolrachel

    December 3, 2006 at 5:55 am

    I think encore is actually supposed to take qt files but my version freezes every time I try that version.

  • Melvin Cox

    December 5, 2006 at 10:37 am

    Since your objective is to burn a DVD, you may wish to utilize TMPGEnc (https://www.tmpgenc.net) – aka the Tsunami Encoder.

    A QuickTime plug-in for TMPGEnc (QTReader.vfp) is available online see:

    https://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/4942/svcd.html

    The plug-in will facilitate input of the QuickTime Reference files output by Avid Xpress.

    There is no need to spend the time and resources required to generate an .avi

    Notes:

    The QuickTime reader must be installed on your machine.

    Output QuickTime Reference audio in the WAVE (not AIFF-C) format. You MUST manually specify the resulting .wav file as the audio source within TMPGEnc.

    I hope that this addresses your issue…

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