I have ripped DVD+RW discs with Edius 6.03. (did it today) and it works fine.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
DVD capture
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by John Lewis View PostI think from memory when i did it the broken clip remains untill the process has finished, it is working in the backgroundAnton Strauss
Antons Video Productions - Sydney
EDIUS X WG with BM Mini Monitor 4k and BM Mini Recorder, Gigabyte X299 UD4 Pro, Intel Core i9 9960X 16 Core, 32 Threads @ 4.3Ghz, Corsair Water Cooling, Gigabyte RTX-2070 Super 3X 8GB Video Card, Samsung 860 Pro 512GB SSD for System, 8TB Samsung Raid0 SSD for Video, 2 Pioneer BDR-209 Blu-ray/DVD burners, Hotswap Bay for 3.5" Sata and 2.5" SSD, Phanteks Enthoo Pro XL Tower, Corsair 32GB DDR4 Ram, Win10 Pro
Comment
-
It was created within Edius about 4 years ago (whatever version was current then), But I have never had problems using Edius to rip non-copyrighted DVDs - that don't have some underlying problem.
My guess, is the problem is likely within the DVD disc itself and Edius is not very tolerant of marginal discs. In my experience if Edius won't rip a DVD correctly another software based ripper just might.
However I have found that on occasion no software ripper works and only a real DVD player unit will play a 'faulty' disc correctly. And the capability to tolerate corruptions varies greatly between models. I have a Pioneer unit that I bought nearly a decade ago for $600 at the time that seems to tolerate most corruptions, whereas the other units I have just won't play the same suspect discs correctly.
Also, I have two DVD drives from different manufacturers on my PC and often find one will rip a suspect disc successfully whilst the other drive won't. I have even had the experience where repeated tries on the same drive can yield success in the end.Last edited by andris; 09-08-2011, 10:41 AM.
Comment
-
I just had a similar experience to what Paul had when he originally posted this thread.
The "troubled" DVD originated from a DVD Recorder back in 2006 and would play correctly in a DVD player unit & the software player on my PC.
The Edius 6.03 rip to the Bin appeared to work. It showed the correct value for clip length (1 hour), correct aspect ratio (704:480) and put it onto the timeline OK - but there was only about 10 seconds of valid picture/audio and the rest was just silent green screen. This was part of a 5 DVD set and they all did much the same thing (few seconds longer/shorter before green screen).
Ripping using DVD Shrink ended up with exactly same result when the VOBs were put onto the Edius timeline.
Using TMPGEnc I ripped the DVDs and then re-encoded them. All the re-encoded VOBs from TMPGEnc work perfectly.
Comment
-
yes, always perfect results with TMPGEnc no matter how bad or non DVD compliant the content
I think the EDIUS source browser requires that the disk content is made to perfection
the EDIUS source browser does a correct job with all DVDs that I created with DVD Lab Pro
DVD Recorders are mainly designed to record and play back in the same machine
they usually do things in strange ways
1. no AUDIO_TS folder
2. open GOP
3. 704 width instead of 720
4. incorrect I, P and B count per GOP (Pal is max 15 and NTSC is max 18)Anton Strauss
Antons Video Productions - Sydney
EDIUS X WG with BM Mini Monitor 4k and BM Mini Recorder, Gigabyte X299 UD4 Pro, Intel Core i9 9960X 16 Core, 32 Threads @ 4.3Ghz, Corsair Water Cooling, Gigabyte RTX-2070 Super 3X 8GB Video Card, Samsung 860 Pro 512GB SSD for System, 8TB Samsung Raid0 SSD for Video, 2 Pioneer BDR-209 Blu-ray/DVD burners, Hotswap Bay for 3.5" Sata and 2.5" SSD, Phanteks Enthoo Pro XL Tower, Corsair 32GB DDR4 Ram, Win10 Pro
Comment
Comment