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Posted by gerry on 10/17/06 03:57
If my memory serves me correctly (when I tried to use Nerovison), I
think the basic Nerovision can only handle LPCM sound, not Dolby sound.
I had the Nero program as the basic program (no Dolby plug-in) bundled
with a DVD burner. I gave up on Nerovision a long time ago for making
a DVD copy. If you can get a copy of Nero OEM 6.3.1.11 or earlier,
Nero will work as the burning software for DVDShrink, which does a
great job of making Video_TS files at 100% (zero) compression, with the
Video_TS file stored on a folder you create on your desktop. As you
now know, the Audio_TS file is empty, automatically created but
useless.
Once you have the Video_TS file, you can use ImgToolBurn software to
create an ISO image file. This ISO image file goes tight on the hard
drive, no need for a folder. You can use Nero 6.3 to burn this data
file to a DVDR, for future use. DVDDecrypter software can burn this
ISO file in MPEG format to a DVDR using Nero as the burning program.
Newer versions of Nero are intentionally disabled so they cannot work
with DVDShrink and ImgToolBurn.
Usually, when I post a suggestion on burning DVDRs, some lame comes up
with an ass-backward comment on a better way to burn the DVDR. From
what I have read, the best way to burn a DVDR is to first create an ISO
image file. This mirror image file can be stored on your hard drive or
on a DVDR if you need additional copies made at the rated speed of your
DVDR(avoid using a burning speed greater than the DVDR's maximum speed
and set to a specific speed - 4X,6X,8X).
Best of luck. Taiyo Yuden makes the best DVD-R media, IMHO.
John wrote:
> On Fri, 13 Oct 2006 23:16:28 GMT, "Travis" <trav1085@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> >You have to burn it to a DVD, not the HD
> >===========================
>
> Why? In the past I have burned to Hard Drive and then to DVD without
> any problems? It gives you the option to do either.
>
> The reason I have always preferred to burn to Hard Drive folder first
> is because if anything goes wrong during the process to a blank DVD
> you are more likely to toast your media.
>
> Usually if you burn to HD first it is better because you can leave
> your computer encoding it, then you can just burn it to DVD
> afterwards.
>
> If I am getting a disc without any sound after burning from the files
> that were encoded to the Hard Drive folder first, why would it be any
> different burning directly to DVD? I would still have the same
> problem, a DVD disc without any sound.
>
> It must be something else that is wrong that I need to do. I am going
> to have to buy some blank DVD-RWs to test on because I'm not prepared
> to waste any more blanks. Unless of course someone can tell me for
> definite what the issue might be?
>
> John
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