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No Audio with Fair Use
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Author Topic: No Audio with Fair Use  (Read 3365 times)
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madtytan
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« on: May 04, 2004, 02:09:21 PM »

I have converted a movie to Divx with Fair Use. it is 699mbs and nice quality. FOr some reason i have no audio. When i use the fair use wizard to convert the audio settings are greyed out. I have the Divx 5 codec from another crappy DVD rip program i purchased. I have had the same problem with Easy Divx on an identical E-Machine. Any help would be apreciated. I have been converting Divx to VCD/SVC for some time. This is my first foray into DVD/Divx. Thanks!
Michael Madden
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afonic
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« Reply #1 on: May 04, 2004, 03:56:47 PM »

OK first, you included an email in the post and then you posted in the wrong forum.

Now about your problem, have you selected an audio track as the guide shows? If the options are greyed out then probably your DVD contains a type of audio track that FairUse does not support. Please read the FAQ:
http://www.dvd-guides.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=608

And the guide:
http://www.dvd-guides.com/guides.php?category=dvdrip&name=fairuse
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« Reply #2 on: May 04, 2004, 07:05:42 PM »

If FU doesn\'t show any audio track to add, get the \"debug build\" from the official website and give it a try. It supports LPCM and MPA audio tracks.

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madtytan
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« Reply #3 on: May 04, 2004, 07:53:54 PM »

Ifound the bone headed thing i did. I forgot to add the audio file. I assumed from the interface that it was automaticaly loaded when i loaded the video. Guess i shoulda looked closer. Thanks again.

I\'m going to ask another question. If you would prefer to hae me re-post it under another heading ler me know.

I used Fair Use to convert to Divx. It was A Knights Tale. The output file is 704mbs but the video quality is less then movies [removed, please read the forum rules] that are smaller. If you look closely it has a bit of a \"shake\" when it plays and the audio is low. I used the MP3 option with divx. I also used the autodetect feature.
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afonic
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« Reply #4 on: May 05, 2004, 05:12:43 AM »

Generally DivX quality has to do:

With the length of the movie. A 2hour movie is not going to have very good quality in 700MBs.
Also the Quality/Speed settings in DivX plays a role. If you set it to slower the quality improves a lot, but it will take more than the double time. If you set it to standard (default) the quality is going to be worse but it will take you less time.
Also the number of passes matter, but most people do 2 of them so you are OK.
Maybe you want to drop the audio quality a bit (something like 96kbps) and get better quality.
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« Reply #5 on: May 05, 2004, 06:09:39 AM »

Another point is that the included DivX codec is the FREE edition that has a lower quality.

If you want higher quality, use an external DivX codec with DivX Pro installed on your machine.

If you want the best quality, use the internal XviD codec.
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