frenchgrape
8th March 2009, 11:10 PM
This seems to be an ongoing issue for us, so this may help
If the movie is 'out of sync' throughout the movie you could try this method BUT you need to work out how much time the audio is out by ... just use your viewing application as a rough guide
1 second = 1000 milliseconds
So...
Positive numbers are for forward and vice versa
If the movie is out of sync at several parts you simply mark each part with the slider bars ( A and B ) and save them correcting the audio accordingly.
Finally use the program to rejoin all the parts for a single file.
The entire process takes a minute or two (depending on your pc) as it does not need to RECODE the movie.
AviDemux is a Freeware
Download :
http://fixounet.free.fr/avidemux/download.html
Most of the time, just run the core program and it will detect the audio and video portions for you and sync it up for you, takes about a minute and you don't need to set any audio time value....
If the movie is 'out of sync' throughout the movie you could try this method BUT you need to work out how much time the audio is out by ... just use your viewing application as a rough guide
1 second = 1000 milliseconds
So...
Positive numbers are for forward and vice versa
If the movie is out of sync at several parts you simply mark each part with the slider bars ( A and B ) and save them correcting the audio accordingly.
Finally use the program to rejoin all the parts for a single file.
The entire process takes a minute or two (depending on your pc) as it does not need to RECODE the movie.
AviDemux is a Freeware
Download :
http://fixounet.free.fr/avidemux/download.html
Most of the time, just run the core program and it will detect the audio and video portions for you and sync it up for you, takes about a minute and you don't need to set any audio time value....