> So, if I have 24000:1001 material and I want to encode for NTSC DVD, I
> need to specify -F 4 -p (not -F 1 -p). This way, the encoded file has a
> DVD-compliant frame rate (3:1001) with the proper MPEG flag telling
> the decoder to do pulldown (to reconstruct the 24000:1001 video from the
> e
Mark Heath wrote:
Joe Friedrichsen wrote:
After reading mpeg2enc's man page, I decided that changing -F 4 to -F
1 and adding -p would work. However, I was wrong and mpeg2enc changed
the frame rate number to 4 (3/1001) when it started. The man page
gave me the impression that -p would work
Joe Friedrichsen wrote:
Hi! I have a DV stream that I'm trying to encode for DVD. I have an NTSC
DV camera, and it shoots in 3/1001. I can encode it perfectly well
into 3:1001 MPEG-2.
As an experiment, I wanted to make a 24000/1001 encoding (I didn't
really care about the output quali
Hi! I have a DV stream that I'm trying to encode for DVD. I have an NTSC
DV camera, and it shoots in 3/1001. I can encode it perfectly well
into 3:1001 MPEG-2.
As an experiment, I wanted to make a 24000/1001 encoding (I didn't
really care about the output quality, I just was curious).
Hallo
> > There is still one thing that comes into my mind. Try once:
> > lav2yuv -v 2 mjpeg2.avi >/dev/null
> > Than you should see if lav2yuv is able to decode a single frame.
> > If that doesn't work too, I'm really clueless.
>
> I have managed to upgrade mjpegtools to 1.8.0
One other thing th