I have just burnt off my first DVD via DVDWorkshop and it seems to work fine when played via a DVD player and TV BUT the sound is only playing from one side and slowly the sound and the visual get out of sink. THEN to make it worse I played the DVD in my computer and there was no audio at all... What's Wrong. Is it my burner, which is a Ricoh, or is it because i was burning onto a DVDRW?
Any help would be greatly appreciated!
-Akiri
Major Audio Issue!
-
Akiri
More infomation
Sorry i was in such a fluster i forgot to read the moderators READ FIRST POST so heres what i left out
Output format DVD
PAL
If system information is required I can also supply it when needed.
Thanks for any help given.
-Akiri
Output format DVD
PAL
If system information is required I can also supply it when needed.
Thanks for any help given.
-Akiri
I don't think the DVD-RW is the cause. Even if your stand-alone player has problems with R/W, it should play-back fine in the drive that burned it.
What is the audio and video format of your source file? And/or where did it come from? The odds are, that there is something about your video file that Workshop doesn't like.
What audio format (template) did you choose? PAL DVD players are required to play LPCM and MPEG-2 audio. Apparently, most can play Dolby AC3 too, but it's not required.
You may have a defective R/W disc. You can take the physical DVD out of the picture by "burning" the DVD to your hard drive: When you get to the Burn Project To Disc window, uncheck the Create Disc box, and check the Create DVD Folders box. This will write the AUDIO_TS and VIDEO_TS folders onto your hard drive, and you can play back the "DVD" with your DVD player software.
BTW- It is normal for the AUDIO_TS folder to be empty on a regular video DVD. The audio and video are multiplexed together in the VIDEO_TS folder.
The sync problem seems to have many different causes/solutions. In your case, all of the audio problems may have the same cause. Search the forums for "sync", and you'll find lots of discussion and suggestions. In my case, my sync problems were caused by corrupted MPEGs... "Sneaky" corruption... the files played-back OK, but caused out-of-sync DVDs.
And, the word is sync which is short for synchronization.
It's not a real word... I'd guess you'd say it's slang or jargon.
What is the audio and video format of your source file? And/or where did it come from? The odds are, that there is something about your video file that Workshop doesn't like.
What audio format (template) did you choose? PAL DVD players are required to play LPCM and MPEG-2 audio. Apparently, most can play Dolby AC3 too, but it's not required.
You may have a defective R/W disc. You can take the physical DVD out of the picture by "burning" the DVD to your hard drive: When you get to the Burn Project To Disc window, uncheck the Create Disc box, and check the Create DVD Folders box. This will write the AUDIO_TS and VIDEO_TS folders onto your hard drive, and you can play back the "DVD" with your DVD player software.
BTW- It is normal for the AUDIO_TS folder to be empty on a regular video DVD. The audio and video are multiplexed together in the VIDEO_TS folder.
The sync problem seems to have many different causes/solutions. In your case, all of the audio problems may have the same cause. Search the forums for "sync", and you'll find lots of discussion and suggestions. In my case, my sync problems were caused by corrupted MPEGs... "Sneaky" corruption... the files played-back OK, but caused out-of-sync DVDs.
And, the word is sync which is short for synchronization.
[size=92][i]Head over heels,
No time to think.
It's like the whole world's
Out of... sync.[/i]
- Head Over Heels, The Go-Gos.[/size]
No time to think.
It's like the whole world's
Out of... sync.[/i]
- Head Over Heels, The Go-Gos.[/size]
