Hi,
I've spent the last few weeks using DVD to Mobile to RIP my DVD collection using h264 to an avi file. A large proportion of the DVDs are ending up with sound which is perfectly in sync at the start of the film but seems to drift up to a second out of sync later in the film. The PC I'm playing back on doesn't have this type of problem with RIPs from elsewhere. Does anyone know why this happens? I've read some posts which suggest if fps is set incorrectly the audio and video streams will end up different lengths but I can't see a way of correcting this (other than trial and error for each film).
I'm using AC-3/5.1 track (also tried dts, same problem), English only, forced subtitles (direct render). AVI fixed bitrate 1600 and recommended resolution and framerate (one example is Die Another Day which is PAL and set to 25fps). No split.
If there are other settings which are more likely to give a high quality result without taking unnecessary space I'm open to suggestions. I'm not overjoyed at the thought of re RIPing everything but would much rather get this right than end up with poor quality, out of sync files which have me going back to the original disks every time I want to watch something.
Thanks
Rob
P.S. 'Die Another Day' was just a convenient example, please don't hold it against me. I personally think its the weakest Bond films. Invisible car...
I've spent the last few weeks using DVD to Mobile to RIP my DVD collection using h264 to an avi file. A large proportion of the DVDs are ending up with sound which is perfectly in sync at the start of the film but seems to drift up to a second out of sync later in the film. The PC I'm playing back on doesn't have this type of problem with RIPs from elsewhere. Does anyone know why this happens? I've read some posts which suggest if fps is set incorrectly the audio and video streams will end up different lengths but I can't see a way of correcting this (other than trial and error for each film).
I'm using AC-3/5.1 track (also tried dts, same problem), English only, forced subtitles (direct render). AVI fixed bitrate 1600 and recommended resolution and framerate (one example is Die Another Day which is PAL and set to 25fps). No split.
If there are other settings which are more likely to give a high quality result without taking unnecessary space I'm open to suggestions. I'm not overjoyed at the thought of re RIPing everything but would much rather get this right than end up with poor quality, out of sync files which have me going back to the original disks every time I want to watch something.
Thanks
Rob
P.S. 'Die Another Day' was just a convenient example, please don't hold it against me. I personally think its the weakest Bond films. Invisible car...
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