Img Burn Burned to Blu Ray Once but Not Again

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  1. gliebisch is offline

    Member


    I am having a problem using the "build" part for a blu-ray video in Imgburn 2.v.8.0. What I practice is outset by dropping two m2ts files into the input list. These files were created by me using Hauppauge'due south Capture client from a PVR. Imgburn recognizes these files and prompts me on edifice a blu-ray video and I follow the steps. I have options correctly set to UDF 2.50. Nonetheless, the disc I get out puts my video files into the BDMV root instead of the STREAM subfolder. Consequently, when i put it into a Blu-Ray player, it thinks there is no video there and thinks it''s a blu-ray DATA disc.

    If I MANUALLY create the file structure instead, creating only a Certificate and BDMV binder, and and so create a STREAM folder where I drag my m2ts files, would that piece of work? Should I also manually create all the other (empty) folders?

    Gary

  2. Kerry56 is offline

    Member


    ImgBurn is not a Blu-ray authoring program. If y'all need the two m2ts files joined together, use the Append function in tsMuxeR, and output to Blu-ray construction earlier burning with ImgBurn.

    If these are two separate videos, then you'd need a menu to select each. Y'all could employ BD Rebuilder using the File-->Import-->Video Files path to import the two m2ts files and make a unproblematic menu where yous can select each one in the Blu-ray output. Again, you burn with ImgBurn.

  3. gliebisch is offline

    Member


    Actually, ImgBurn does Endeavor to be an Blu-Ray authoring program insomuch as you can give it 2 .m2ts files and it will prompt to create the full Blu-Ray folder structure, where none existed before, it'southward just that information technology'southward putting the .m2ts files in the incorrect place. And then if when you say "non a Blueish-Ray authoring program" you hateful it fails in that regard, you'd be correct. And if I give it only ONE m2ts file, information technology doesn't even Attempt to create the folder structure, only ends upwardly a data disc. Learning curve on tsMuxeR appears to be beyond what I am willing to tackle for this simple project today.
  4. Kerry56 is offline

    Member


    I'm non sure it can be easier than using tsMuxeR. Add together your first file, then click on Bring together to bring in the second. Set up your Output to Blu-ray disc and specify where y'all want the output on the hard drive. Click on the push that reads Start Muxing.

    If your two m2ts files are encoded with the same specs, this should requite you one seamless video, in Blu-ray format. Now, there is no telling from the information yous've given that the output will actually exist compliant to Blu-ray specifications. M2ts files are not necessarily made to match Blu-ray specs, and tsMuxeR volition NOT re-encode them to be then. It just produces the Blu-ray structure, no thing what kind of video and audio your are trying to put in there.

    BD Rebuilder will re-encode to make them compliant, and give a bill of fare to access each one, if you need separate videos.

    ImgBurn is a burning plan and can make ISO files. It has never claimed to exist annihilation else.

  5. gliebisch is offline

    Member


    tsMuxeR non working for me. I am giving it .m2ts files recorded at 8 Mbps, 1920 10 1080, 29fps, audio 192 kbps at 48 kHz. The files were generated by the codec in Hauppauge'due south Hard disk drive PVR2 Capture awarding with component inputs. On import, tsMuxerR says "Unsuppported format--Some tracks not recognized, This track ignored."
  6. Kerry56 is offline

    Fellow member


    Supported video codecs:
    H.264
    Microsoft VC-1;
    MPEG-two.
    Supported audio codecs:
    AAC;
    AC3 / E-AC3(DD+);
    Dolby True Hard disk drive (for streams with AC3 core merely);
    DTS/ DTS-Hard disk drive;
    LPCM.

    Examine the m2ts files with MediaInfo (Tree or Text view) and post the results here.

  7. gliebisch is offline

    Member


    Hither's my output: This is encoded past a Hauppauge PVR 2 Capture device.

    General
    ID : 0 (0x0)
    Complete name : K:\Video\National Parks 3 1080i.m2ts
    Format : MPEG-TS
    File size : 7.52 GiB
    Elapsing : 1 h 53 min
    Overall bit rate mode : Variable
    Overall chip charge per unit : ix 522 kb/s
    Maximum Overall scrap rate : 5 000 kb/s

    Video
    ID : 4113 (0x1011)
    Menu ID : 1 (0x1)
    Format : AVC
    Format/Info : Advanced Video Codec
    Format contour : High@L4
    Format settings, CABAC : Yes
    Format settings, ReFrames : 3 frames
    Codec ID : 27
    Elapsing : i h 52 min
    Flake rate : 8 858 kb/southward
    Width : 1 920 pixels
    Height : 1 080 pixels
    Display aspect ratio : 16:9
    Frame rate : 29.970 (30000/1001) FPS
    Standard : Component
    Color space : YUV
    Chroma subsampling : 4:two:0
    Bit depth : 8 $.25
    Scan blazon : Interlaced
    Browse type, store method : Separated fields
    Scan order : Top Field Start
    $.25/(Pixel*Frame) : 0.143
    Stream size : half dozen.99 GiB (93%)
    Color range : Limited
    Colour primaries : BT.709
    Transfer characteristics : BT.709
    Matrix coefficients : BT.709

    Sound
    ID : 4352 (0x1100)
    Carte du jour ID : 1 (0x1)
    Format : MPEG Audio
    Format version : Version 1
    Format contour : Layer 2
    Codec ID : three
    Elapsing : one h 53 min
    Bit rate style : Constant
    Bit rate : 192 kb/s
    Channel(s) : 2 channels
    Sampling rate : 48.0 kHz
    Compression mode : Lossy
    Filibuster relative to video : -25 ms
    Stream size : 155 MiB (2%)

  8. Kerry56 is offline

    Member


    Ok, that looks like 1080i video using AVC (H264) video, which shouldn't be a problem. Your audio is MP2 however, and not on the list of sound types that tsMuxeR can handle. This is a flake surprising, since it was a reasonably common codec in DVD's. MP2 is not used in Blu ray.
  9. El Heggunte is offline

    DECEASED


    Originally Posted by Kerry56 View Post

    Your audio is MP2 yet, and not on the listing of audio types that tsMuxeR can handle.

    Over here, TSmuxer likes MP2 files. Possibly that sound stream was muxed incorrectly, and/or
    incorrectly flagged/identified every bit MP2 past MediaInfo
    I've already seen (and created also) transport streams whose MP2 and MP3 audio tracks were detected every bit 'AAC' by MPlayer (which so played them either equally silence or as dissonance).
  10. Kerry56 is offline

    Member


    Originally Posted by El Heggunte View Post

    Originally Posted by Kerry56 View Post

    Your audio is MP2 yet, and not on the listing of audio types that tsMuxeR can handle.

    Over hither, TSmuxer likes MP2 files. Possibly that audio stream was muxed incorrectly, and/or
    incorrectly flagged/identified as MP2 past MediaInfo
    I've already seen (and created as well) transport streams whose MP2 and MP3 sound tracks were detected equally 'AAC' by MPlayer (which then played them either every bit silence or as noise).

    I can't think the terminal video I had with MP2 audio, then its not something I've tested in tsMuxeR. The listing I found may be out of date since yous take had success with that blazon of sound and tsMuxeR. But there is something incorrect if the program won't recognize one of the tracks. Mediainfo isn't showing an obvious problem with the video, so I looked for an fault in the sound. He won't exist able to use MP2 in a Blu-ray anyway, and so I might start with demuxing the video and audio, so converting to AC3.
  11. redwudz is offline

    Mod Neophyte Super Moderator redwudz's Avatar


    You might have a wait to the upper left on this page for 'WHAT IS' Blu-ray for the specifications, formats and structure of a BD compliant disc.

wellstherhad.blogspot.com

Source: https://forum.videohelp.com/threads/380166-Burning-blu-ray-video-with-ImgBurn

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