If you use Windows, there's an application called PVAStrumento that does
the same thing as ProjectX. Recent versions of PVAStrumento have
restored audio sync in 100% of the files I have used it on. I just use
the default settings; select the .nuv file, 'make ps', set the output
file, set 2048
On Wed, Apr 06, 2005 at 08:21:21PM -0600, Justin Gombos wrote:
> BTW- I'd like to point out that this problem seems to occurr with the
> Plextor tv402u. Sometimes part way into a capture video will get
> quite choppy, and audio out of sync, which is probably a symptom of
> the problem you describe
On Apr 6, 2005 10:27 PM, mary wright <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> There's a really good program called ProjectX it's a java app with fixes
> most errors in av sync'ing .It hasn't failed to work on eveything I have
> thrown at it .once I get the output from Project X I use Avidemux2 to edit
> and
On Apr 6, 2005 10:21 PM, Justin Gombos <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Wouldn't it be better in that case to reconstruct the missing video
> frames, rather than drop audio frames? Missing video frames can
> probably be reconstructed by interpolating the 'before' and 'after'
> frames, no?
Yes, but i
There's a really good program called ProjectX it's a java app with fixes
most errors in av sync'ing .It hasn't failed to work on eveything I have
thrown at it .once I get the output from Project X I use Avidemux2 to edit
and re-encode to what ever format needed
I also have a wrapper script that o
* Ian Trider <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2005-04-05 20:58]:
>
> BTW, essentially if the problem you are referring to is audio sync,
> it is because of how the PVR-250 outputs streams -- the video and
> audio are aligned with via the PTS data, essentially timestaps,
> which dicates the temporal relationsh