![]() ![]() So in finding Windows Movie Maker, I was actually thrilled to find something that worked.Ģ) After editing with Movie Maker: wmv (sucks I know, but the only output options are wmv or h.264 and for some reason my h.264 files are truncated to 1gb)ģ) Either of the below (I have tried both)Ī) Converted back to avi/xvid with " format factory"īoth a and b result in sync problems on my TV. The reason I am using Windows Movie Maker is because I tried 3 other times to edit this movie, and failed each time, whether it was something crashing, or the program locking up during exporting. But it's been discouraging having so many hiccups with the first film or two. Because I have a list of classics from my childhood that I would love to be able to watch with the kids. I have already spent many many hours trying to edit this film (Edited the entire movie several times for nothing, because I had problems with the softwares.) and I'm really wanting to get a streamlined process going from: Editing a film, exporting it, being able to watch it on the TV with the kids. using whatever data VLC is using to keep them together, is there a program that can automatically "stitch them together" at the right points for the output file?Ĥ) Are there not some kind of markers that say "yes, frame 153782 of the video corresponds to 01:15:51 in the audio)? If not, why hasn't someone invented this yet? Wouldn't it solve audio sync issues once and for all?ĥ) If #3 does not exist, how am I supposed to manually fix the audio sync error, when it doesn't show up when playing back on the PC? Other than trial and error (and wasting time and blank DVDs in the process) With both methods, the audio is out of sync with the video (Video ahead of audio by about 1 second)ġ) How does VLC "know" to stay in sync, when my TV can't?Ģ) Whose fault is it, the video file, or my TV?ģ) Is there a way to automatically sync the files to play on my TV properly? i.e. ![]() So I have tried exporting to xvid, and also a plain DVD. My TV has a DVD player, and also supports divx/xvid. However, when I try to export it to watch it on my TV, the audio is out of sync. The movie plays fine in VLC on my computer, and the audio stays in sync with the video through the entire movie. ![]() I have a movie that I edited using Windows Movie Maker, to take out all the curse words and objectionable parts, so my kids can watch it. I looked through the sticky thread regarding this topic and couldn't really find an answer to my questions. I need some help with some audio sync issues. ![]()
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