mpg file before importing into DVDit sometimes this will work. mpg file? If you are, try creating using elementary streams or demux the.
Shorten your audio a frame (or a few frames) in Premiere and then export your timeline.Īs Scott mentioned, unfortunately it's a known bugĪre you creating a. My inclination would be to do that before you bring the timeline into DVDit Pro HD. Maybe the transcoding of PCM and the passthrough of the MPEG video is causing the issue.įYI - There is an extensive posting on the Encore forum about this same issue post I find most compelling is the one that says to shorten audio so that it is one frame shorter than video. Try to export with AC3 audio instead of WAV and see what happens. Is audio the same length as video (zoom way in and check). Which are you using? are you using CBR or VBR. We have now replicated it in house, but now fix yet.seems to happen much more with Program Streams (mixed video and audio) than with Elementary Streams (separate M2V and AC3). Plee was kind enough to send in some files that show this error. Ok, so unfortunately EOF is an error we have not yet fully tracked down. Is it possible to acces the native, or raw button files (in My DVD 7 they are Photoshop files) and then edit them to create your own borders for buttons etc? I am looking at the DVDit range with a watery mouth, how do u find working out 4 u? (besides the Adobe Prem mission)
There is other software that compresses and authors much better and faster.
Simply exporting a file from premiere is lightyears faster than transcoding to DVD, you may miss the next Haleys comet waiting for that! (If you are using Adobe prem 2, u can burn the dvd, menu everything from the programme itself now.) I have never had much joy with Adobe media encoders or the earlier 'Pro' series so called DVD capabilities. This file I then take to Burning software and do the menu and transcode all at once. (I clearly dont have a shortage of hard drive space). I export my hd file as uncompressed mov with square pix at 1280x720 or higher with no fields (progressive). This guide was built with Adobe Premiere 6.5, but the basic techniques are still valid even in the newest edition of Adobe Premiere CS4. There are easier ways of doing this, I'm sure, but this way gives you maximum control over each step.I dont normally transcode and burn in premiere. Much like Photoshop or any number of intricate/complex software, the best way to learn in Premiere is to literally play around. If you want to go back to DVD, I would just do the steps above and then convert back to mpg2 after it is edited. Somewhere along the way (the DVD2AVI step) you get an audio file from the vobs. Then you can do what you want with them and export them to whatever format you want. This virtual avi file you can import into Virtual Dub (and maybe premier as well, I'm not sure.
Convert the project file to a virtual avi file using VFAPI Converter, another free utility.Ĥ. Convert the vobs to a single "project" file using the free utility DVD2AVI.ģ. You can't just copy them over from the DVD.Ģ. Rip the vobs with a ripper like DVD-decrypter or Smartripper.
If you want to end up with a compressed AVI file, I would recommend this route:ġ. Eliminate intermediate rendering when moving sequences into Adobe Encore® CS4 software, and take advantage of new support for Adobe Photoshop® files with video and blend modes. It depends on whether you want to go back to DVD or keep it as a video file (avi). Achieve a high level of productivity from production to delivery with the tightly integrated toolset in Adobe Premiere Pro CS4.