Have fun! Other things you could try is remux to other things like mkv, or just remux the video stream and have a look at them etc. output.m2ts: It plays poorly with sync issues around the transition points. Produce.m2ts: Plays well on my PC and is good test for pjc3 SVRT Test Project: This is a short segment filming a metronome app with a title flashing up. Hi, I've uploaded a package at that contains the following:ġ) Used "Pack Project Materials" to export the SVRT Test Files (Original M2TS, and a Title)Ģ) The folder also contains Produce.m2ts which was created using the std 1080/50p AVC template in "Produce"ģ) The folder also contains output.m2ts which was created using the PD9FIX.BAT remux process on produce.m2ts I'd say for the majority of the users the issue appears to be "Fixed" but underneath the hood there is still some issues (i'm guessing) with the timestamps so,ġ) I still don't recomend you use "FixPD9.bat)Ģ) If you think you will remux to another "container" then check it works first with you and most importantlyģ) Check a sample SVRT file with you player as how the file plays depends on how the "splitter" reads the timestamps and delivers the streams to the Audio and Video renderer on your system. I them went as far as to just remux the video stream and the issues is present in the raw ".h264" file. when remuxed to MKV you see some transition issues as well but it is not as bad and tends to be when going back to SVRT and the end of the rendered segment. when run through FixPD9 (demux with eac3to then remuxed with tsMuxer) you see issues at all the transition points between the copied and rendered segments of the video Here is the information about the video files. tsMuxer still does not like the Audio stream (does not recognise it) Convert mkv with AVC HighL4.0 to mp4 with ACV HighL4.1 or higher Ask Question Asked 8 years, 10 months ago Modified 1 year, 5 months ago Viewed 3k times 0 I am trying to convert some mkv files I have to mp4 so that they can be played to my chromecast. One thing I did notice is the default 5.1 Dolby Track in this profile is encoded at 448 instead of 384kbps so the files get a bit bigger.Ģ) SVRT: This is now my recommended settings and works as it should, you get SVRT on all segments of the Video both before and after a segment that requires to be rendered and I don't see or hear any issues on these transition points.ĮDIT: Testing the demuxing / remuxing of the SVRT output and have some further comments: Thanks Dafydd and apologies for the late reply as I have been traveling (manly Kent, Egypt, Dubai) so have a bunch more footage and have only now had a chance to test.and I am glad I did! I'll have to check it out it more details but it looks great for 1080p users!ġ) 1080p Profiles: These are now added and work just fine so there really is no need to manually edit the profile.ini file anymore. If your input has a bit rate of up to 65,000 kBit/s, chances are it'll still look pretty good after conversion though.Complete name : X:\Video Editing\2010\Original.m2tsĬhannel positions : Front: L C R, Side: L R, LFEĬomplete name : X:\Video Editing\Produce_21.m2tsĬomplete name : X:\Video Editing\Produce_22.m2tsĬomplete name : X:\Video Editing\Produce_29.m2ts The default value here is 23, while values between 18 and 28 are considered sane. Try setting the -crf option to influence the constant quality parameter. Of course, reencoding the video will degrade its quality to some extent, given that you're applying a lossy conversion again. MediaInfo can also help you analyze container and codec details. You can check this while encoding, where x264 says something like: profile High, level 4.0 The output will have the correct profile and level set in its metadata. Here we've just copied the audio stream since it won't be affected.
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