Argh! I keep running into so many problems. Like I said if you have been following my other post, everything started out FINE! Just PERFECT! I've been burning a series onto DVDs, and episodes 1-12 worked PERFECTLY! Not a single problem. Then all of a sudden things are coming up all wierd. Allright, so I'll cut to the chase. I got really annoyed with TMPGEnc, because after messing around with it I finally got it back to how it used to be, but now I have run into yet another problem. No matter what AVI I try to convert to MPEG, no matter how I go about either decompressing the audio with virtualdub, or extracting it from the AVI itself to convert into an MP2 with BeSweet, I get the same results: The VIDEO speeds WAY ahead of the audio after its converted to MPEG-2!!! Its not a problem with the files, otherwise why would they all be like that, especially after I SUCCESSFULLY burned 11 onto DVDs already! I tried other videos too. It seems that no matter what I convert into mpeg, no matter what program I use (I tried TMPGEnc AND WinAVI). Now, I'm a really big newb to this kind of stuff, but I have a little theory. Earlier I was trying to help my friend succeed in playing MPEG-2 files on his computer. I downloaded a few codecs and stuff needed in order to play MPEG-2 files so I could send it to him over MSN. Now, I actually installed a few of these things on my system. I have no idea what the hell I was thinking, probobly just trying to get a head start and be able to walk him through it. (Visual self-taught learner here x_X) Now, since I was already able to play MPEG-2 files on my computer, I wonder if the codec (and some splitter I downloaded) might be working in unison with my original codec, causing a boost in video speed. I know its a really stupid theory, but its all I got, because I have no idea what I'm doing as you can see. Any help will be greatly appreciated. Thank you very much.
Holy long posts Batman (no there was no signifigance to my post, just letting off a little stress that this stuffs been giving me LOL)
If the video of the AVI was in-sync, if you made the VirtualDub's check and the 'uncompression trick' explained in 1) of http://forums.afterdawn.com/thread_view.cfm/129217, the only thing I can imagine is that, if you watch the video when the sound is in-sync, at a certain point the video can be seen it's corrrupted an, from that point, the sound is non in-sync of a constant rate. You can do quickly this check: uncompress the audio from than AVI with VirtualDub and then try to open the WAV with EAC. It shouldn't be able to open it, because it find 'a non-standard WAV' (i.e. a corrupted one). If this is the case, you apply the tryck explained in my 'sticky' thread, 3) of http://forums.afterdawn.com/thread_view.cfm/129217 , if you manage to open there's no corruption point and I cannot imagine why the un-sync happens.
There is NO way that ALL my AVIs on my computer are corrupt. See, it happens no matter what video I try. No matter what I do. No matter which program I encode it with.