Most likely due to changing A/V sync within the MPEG2 stream.
It's a known problem without a known (bug-free) solution.
Cory,
Is this just a known issue for hardware-MPEG2-card recorded streams,
or all MPEG2 streams in general? I regularly record DVB and PVR-350
streams here in the UK, demu
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> The use of ProjectX therefore may seem to be the magic, at least for
> me (it fixes streams on the fly if it finds any errors and adjusts the
> audio to compensate) as it supports both DVB MPEG2 and the MPEG2 files
> my 350 generate
On 5/5/05, Nick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 5/5/05, Cory Papenfuss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > I am writing some of my MythTV recordings to DVD and I
> > > get a-v sync drifts during the DVD recording, up to a
> > > second or two near the end of a two-hour recording
> > > (playing within m
On 5/5/05, Cory Papenfuss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I am writing some of my MythTV recordings to DVD and I
> > get a-v sync drifts during the DVD recording, up to a
> > second or two near the end of a two-hour recording
> > (playing within myth is fine, though). I've noticed
> > that many peo
I am writing some of my MythTV recordings to DVD and I
get a-v sync drifts during the DVD recording, up to a
second or two near the end of a two-hour recording
(playing within myth is fine, though). I've noticed
that many people have this problem, but all the
solutions I've tried that people sugge
I've spent a *lot* of time on this problem and can't
seem to find a solution. I really hope someone can
help me with this.
I am writing some of my MythTV recordings to DVD and I
get a-v sync drifts during the DVD recording, up to a
second or two near the end of a two-hour recording
(playing withi