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Hi
I got a DVD in PAL format and want to convert it to NTSC DVD How can it be done??? Thank you very much Edit : As I suppose you meant NTSC, not NTFS. |
There is not an easy way I am aware of:
However, check this link: http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.ph...ntsc+c onvert Just incase if the link goes down: Quote:
Cheers, McoreD |
Thank you very much!!!!!
I will give it a try :) |
How did it work out for you ?
Supposedly, _this_ software will be able to do it : http://www.pegasys-inc.com/en/product/te3xp.html |
i recently had the same issue; in a nutshell, here is what I did...
1. copy files to hd, using dvd decryptor 2. get a copy of infoedit; open the first .ifo file on your hard drive, look for any references to PAL, and hit the "convert to NTSC button...there should be at least 2 references in the .ifo file to that.. 3. go through the rest of the .ifo files on your HD. repeat the procedure, when prompted, save the files,. 4. use your burning software to burn a NTSC dvd.. I forgot where I found this info out, but I know it was done via a Google search.. Good luck, and try not to make too many coasters! |
Stupid question: Why can't you rip it in the usual way with DVD Shrink or Recode2, etc, and then burn it with Nero? Or why not, for that matter Instant Copy?
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The TV industry is dominated by two main standards for TV design: PAL and NTSC. NTSC is one of my pet hates basically because
of it's rather low quality and use of weird framerates. NTSC stands for the National Television Systems Committee, it is the colour video standard used in North America, Canada, Mexico and Japan. Some engineers have said it should stand for Never Twice Same Color because no two NTSC pictures look alike :). Due to the electric system used in the US it was decided to scan the lines across the NTSC TV screen at about 60Hz (or 60 half frames per second) which produced 30 whole pictures every second. NTSC resolution is about one sixth less than that of PAL. This may not seem so bad, but divide a sheet of paper into six even parts and chop one off of the bottom and you will have a lot of detail lost. NTSC uses 525 horizontal lines of which only about 487 make up the active picture. PAL stands for Phase Alternating Line, it is the TV standard used for Europe, Hong Kong and the Middle East. It was a new standard based on the old NTSC system but designed to correct the NTSC colour problems produced by phase errors in the transmission path. PAL resolution is 625 horizontal lines but only about 540 of these are used for the picture. PAL is higher quality than NTSC, it keeps a sharper picture and remains closer to the original format produced by motion picture cameras. Due to the European electric standards it was decided to interlace PAL lines every other line at 50Hz producing 25 whole frames every second. http://www.dvddemystified.com/dvdfaq.html#1.19 Quote:
BTW : I am currently running a DVD conversion PAL -> NTSC, using http://www.pegasys-inc.com/en/product/te3xp.html, and after 8 Hrs 49 Min, it has reached 51% :rolleyes: and is finally on the 2. and last pass. |
Quote:
When I did the dvd decryptor/infoedit/ Nero conversion, the entire process took about 2 hours... |
@ wase4711 :
Its a AMD XP2200*@2500, with only 512Mb of PC133 :rolleyes: RAM. The movie is about 1Hr 45min long, and is beeing reencoded using 2-pass VBR, both audio and video. Now, I have 1 BIG MPEG2 file, without any menu's or subtitles... So after some more work, with the adding of chapters and a menu, and some "extras", it will need some more time to encode to a final NTSC DVD. Too god I dont have to do this too often ;) my el-cheapo standalone DVD player eats both standards :) but this is just a test, to see if I will be able to convert some family movies, and send to my wifes family in Venezuela, where they use NTSC. btw : a dual CPU setup ( or P4-HT ) might cut tthis time MUCH, I know from some earlier experiments, using a DELL with dual XEON setup :) Thet was much faster and more fun. |
1 coaster so far ;)
Was getting stuck in the animated menu I made.... |
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