![]() ![]() All I did was insert them and then save the clip as, and then that''s what it gave me, twice. Also when I use it it changes the color scheme away from Windows 7 which is what I have. It goes like in increments of black borders on the side for a second or two. ![]() ![]() Going into fullscreen is also weird, it goes like in sequences, it doesn't fully fill up the sides at once. I just let it play from the start without doing anything and the time stops at 0:58 even though the bar continues to move along and play. I open it up in VLC and scroll through and it's the whole video, yet sort of subtly jumpy when you click through it, but the time still remains the same of 2 minutes and 36 seconds total. But the file time is 2:36 when in reality it's 26min. Just used this, weird stuff happening.so the total file size is correct and it's large, 1.2gb. You can try one of the other smart renderers, but but there are many ways to append mpeg2, even freeware like mpg2cut2 But you need to add the par value 32:27 for the non ITU NTSC 16:9 as in the commandline, not sure if you can do it through the GUI or if it allows you to modify the commandline But the old versions of mp4box.exe found in those GUI's should work fine. If you just want mp4box.exe, you can use 7zip and extract js.dll, libea圓2.dll, libgpac.dll, sslea圓2.dll, mp4box.exe. They all have various quirks and issues that "more than casual" users will know about, and various workaroundsįor mp4box, the new versions install a bunch of stuff including a player. If you're doing more "heavy" editing, more complex projects, then I would use a NLE with some workarounds. Alternatives are solveigmm video splitter, tmpgenc smart renderer. The rest of the stream is passed through untouched. A few frames might be re-encoded around the cutsite, depending on where you cut. You're left with mpeg2, the same type and quality as the original. If all you're doing is simple "join clips together and cut stuff out" for mpeg2 sources, I would recommend videoredo. If you're encoding interlaced it's still "2 birds." 2) The AR interpretation you want 3) and if you want to use a better deinterlacer if you're encoding progressive there are much better ones in avisynth like QTGMC. So it's sort of 3birds/ 1 stone when using the frameserve/lossless intermediate workflow. It might be possible to batch process the exported files with a modified ffmpeg build or mp4box to overwrite the AR interpretation either in the bitstream or containerīut many people aren't happy with Adobe's licenced Mainconcept/Rovi h264 encoder in the first place. If you could interpret the PAR of the file, the sequence settings, and the export settings to use 32:27, that would be exactly what you want. There is no fix within PP that I know of, not even in the newest version. The ITU NTSC 4:3 is 10:11, but non ITU is 8:9, so yes, even on 4:3 you get something slightly different *note - This didn't happen when I exported DVD rips of VHS backups through Premiere (mostly ripped via Handbrake) that I had to cut stuff out of with Premiere, only with these MPG files from the Sony Handycam DCR‑SR68. I've been Googling it for answers and have no fix so far. I hope I'm posting this in the right place. ![]() I attached two files showing what happens, the first is the original and the second is an export. I can't for the life of me figure out what's wrong, I've exported to preset match source (720x480) which should be exact and the resolution in the description says it is (the source and preview pictures don't even change as you switch back and forth from them), I've done it in widescreen, I've done NTSC DV widescreen, all of them have that border. And I've worked on these for about 4 days now for no reason now. And as I'm nearing the end I notice that the exported videos have a small border on the top and bottom that's not present in the originals. I got videos off of my uncle's Sony Handycam DCR‑SR68 as well for this family cloud drive I'm planning and that camera's method of transferring video was a tad bit closer to our time here (no capturing, just transferring the MPG video files), was in the process of combining clips of days into their own videos in Premiere, exporting them to h264 mp4 to be placed on the list. ![]()
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