![]() I transcode and in version 0.6.1.x and 0.6.2.x it always seems to play the file in Windows and on the XBox 360., "sourceData": "#!/usr/bin/perl\n# MediaCoder 0. On the Picture tab I now set the frames/second to match the frames/second to the original file. It doesn't make sense to set the audio Kbps higher than the original as you can't improve quality and you are just adding to the file size. It is possible that you need more Kbps for 4.1 or 5.1 if each channel uses 192(I'm not sure, so if your audio is messing up use the same as the properties of the original file). You should use Constant (if you don't I've read that it can mess up the sync of the audio to the video). In my first post I suggested to use Variable. On the Lame MP3 tab in audio (use the Lame MP3 encoder) choose Preset Custom and set Rate Mode to "CBR" The C stands for Constant the V for variable. If the bitrate of the original is greater than 192 I tend to set it to 192 Kbps which is CD quality. See what the original is and then use the same bitrate. Although CSI, NCIS, and other cop shows would have you believe you can magically add resolution/quality it isn't really true.ĭo the same with Audio. If you set it bigger then you add unneeded bits to the file and increase the size. If you set it smaller then you will loose quality. In the properties of the file you are transcoding check out the Video Bitrate, then go to the Video Tab and with mode set to "Bitrate-based", enable Video (if you need to transcode the video and can't just copy it) and set the Kbps to the same rate as the file you are working with. Other things that help to conserve quality. Doing this will speed up conversion and help ensure you don't loose and bits, or add in any unneeded bits. If they are compatible with the 360 then you can just click the "copy video" or "copy audio" on the appropriate tabs, vs. It should give you the Video and Audio Codecs used. When you load a file in MediaCoder in the upper right corner of the screen you see the properties of the file. ![]() Likely basic stuff, but for newbies converting files to work on the XBox 360 it should help. Since my post over a year ago I've figured a few other things out as well. It is possible that I didn't have some setting correct but the 0.6.2 version just worked. has something wrong with it in relation to working with the XBox. (to my knowledge the latest 0.6.x version). I tried about 30 other variations and nothing else would work. To do that I had to go to the Container Tab and set the multiplexer to MEncoder. At first I thought it played on Windows XP Media Center edition with all of the current updates (as of Aug 16, 2009) but then the best I could do was get it to play on XP with the audio but no video. I could then no longer get anything to convert to play for the XBox 360. I removed my 0.6.1 version during the process. My experience converting MKV file to Xvid/AVI for the XBox 360 It played fine with WMP11 on my XP Media Center machine. What settings do I use to get this to work. See question number 11 for more information.
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