Frage von sebastian2648:thanks for the good tips, the last male. Now I had a problem Neuse. My homemade video dvd runs about one hour long with no problems, then falters and building up garnicht ton more runs. what is the reason?
Antwort von StefanS:
Since you do not give you details of what you've done like, I can only guess.
Did you possibly create a DL and after one hour there is the problem with the transition of a data layer to another?
Greeting
Stefan
Antwort von sebastian2648:
More information? Also: The video is 659 MB is a Windows Media Player File (stands under "Properties"). The video I have the program "DivX to DVD Converter" hunted and the result (several files) with "Nero StartSmart" on a DVD with the label "DVD + R 4.7 GB 120 min video (standard play)" burned . Is that s.Info? Sorry that I have not already written the first time hab.
Antwort von sebastian2648:
That reminds me what a. When the video was converted, in between times, I have music playing on the PC. Can this thing have a negative impact?
Antwort von StefanS:
So, no DL.
The rest sounds too much like preset, non-GM standard values than that because the problem I would seek.
Again just a guess:
Do you have something with a blank or another tried burning speed?
If only this one plant affected and you had previously synonymous results, based on the same route produced were okay?
Greeting
Stefan
Antwort von sebastian2648:
I've been three different videos on this or dealt with all the same results. a different type dvds I've already used synonymous. times stood dvd-r dvd + r times out (however, all effective from the supermarket) with divx to dvd converter, there is hardly eistellmöglichkeiten only the format: auto - Force 4:3 - 16:9 force one, called "standard" : auto - force pal 25 fps - force ntsc 29.97 fsp. in nero I've no idea of the settings. (sorry, I mostly just keep the default setting in)
Antwort von StefanS:
At the moment you only can I recommend two tests.
Try holding a "brand blanks", such as Verbatim, or search times on the homepage of your burner manufacturer for the media compatibility list, match the firmware version of your burner.
"Burn" times an image of the DVD or, better still, copy one of these times "bad" DVDs on your calculator and look of the movie times on the hard drive. Result?
Greeting
Stefan