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Posted by Karen C. on 04/13/06 20:12
Hebee Jeebes wrote:
> DVD as a standard will have the VOB files broken down in to smaller files.
> This is how it works and there is nothing you can do to change that. If you
> want one large file than transfer the audio on the VHS to a CD instead. Just
> do the audio you don't need the video.
But I *do* need the video because I have to SEE the numbers to
place them within the document (two or three numbers per page).
I have to place the numbers in the exact place where they come up
in the audio. This is so the person editing the program will be
able to go directly to the spots they need, just by matching up
the numbers from the transcript.
Well the weird thing is that it can play a movie straight
through, even though they're sectioned off. When he set the DVD
settings for 6-hour and put 1-hour segments on it, he was able to
do that, but the pedal stopped working about 50 minutes into the
first file. Wouldn't work with the remainder of the first file
or the files after that on the same DVD.
Then he set it to one hour per DVD, and that's when it chopped up
the file in segments.
> You also might want to look for a program that can pull the audio out of a
> DVD video and save it as a WAV file. This should give you one large file.
I will have to check with the StartStop people (they make my wav
pedal) to see if they have any suggestions.
>
> But, trying to continue to use the DVD's VOB files isn't going to work. No
> matter what software you use the VOB files will be broken down in to the
> smaller files.
Okay, i will stop spinning my wheels and work on another solution.
> To put it plainly choosing to do the VHS as a DVD for audio work is just
> plain wrong. A bad choice on your part. You don't choice a video standard
> for audio work.
See above. I *have* to have both audio *and* video in order to
produce the work needed.
Thanks for your feedback.
Karen C.
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