Greg Barringer
Forum Replies Created
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Greg Barringer
March 5, 2016 at 3:31 pm in reply to: Project and render settings for different delivery formats – NTSC DVD and Bluray – mixed source material?I’m joining this thread to learn. I just wasted a lot of time, money and effort trying to burn a BD-R of mixed video sources. The problem finally ended up being a mix of two Sony Handy Cams, one recorded AVC, the other was mpeg4 H2.64. Removing the H2.64 solved it.
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After looking closer, it wasn’t iPhone video, it was h2.64 video from a second Sony camcorder that caused the problem.
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In Vegas, I removed the iPhone video clip and made a new rendering.
DVDA burned the BD-R perfectly.
The mix of AVC Sony camcorder video and iPhone video caused the problem. -
The problem must be in the rendering from Vegas. I can take other renderings of different projects and everything works settings in DVDA. I’ve tried MainConcept AVC & Mpeg2, Sony AVC all at different variables and nothing works with my latest project. I’m guessing it’s caused by the mix of video from Sony camcorder and iPhone.
It’s time to move on to the next project. -
Wow that is a long thread. I’ll read it.
It’s not a hardware issue. The burner and player are new and the firmware is up to date. -
I opened a previous DVDA project. It rendered, burned and played perfectly, so I’m guessing the problem is in the source media or my rendering settings. I’d like to figure this out so I can avoid this in the future. I’ve wasted about twelve BD-R trying.
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I’ve done exactly what your trying. My old VHS camcorder tapes date back to 1985 to present. I’ve burned them to BD with Chapters for each new date or event. It works great.
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A little education on photography resolution;
A photograph’s resolution is measured in pixels, not file size.
A photo captured at 1920 x1080 = 2,073,600 pixels or 2.07 megapixels. That’s the resolution no matter what format it’s saved in..png, jpeg, .tiff are types of format and compression. Of the three, .tiff gives the most lateral adjustment for highlights and shadows. As a result, .tiff has the larger file size because it has less compression.
If you saved the same photo in all three format, they would all have the same resolution, 1920 x 1080.
Resolution determines the size that a photo can be printed. Professional print labs like MPIX, require a minimum of 150 ppi (pixel per inch) so a 1920 x 1080 image can be printed 7″ x 10″ max.
1920 / 150
1080 / 150The best file format for photography editing is RAW. That’s is the image taken directly from the sensor of the camera without any compression, color correction, or any other adjustment. RAW images give a wide gamut of adjustment levels and is the preferred format of professional photographers. RAW can be edited and saved as jpeg or any other format. Even a RAW image can have a resolution of 1920 x 1080, but a huge file size.
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Try saving to a folder in your Documents instead of the desktop.
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Greg Barringer
April 20, 2015 at 10:44 pm in reply to: PNG. Images displaying in Trimmer Window, but not in Video Preview window.Do you have more than one track? Is there anything above the track with the .png?