help with render setting for progressive

Johnkl wrote on 4/22/2015, 1:48 PM
I use to use a HD (AVCHD) camera that shoot in interlace, now a have new camera that can shot in both Interlace and progressive
50i =24M
50P=28M
Until now I have used the camera in interlaced mode,simply because I cannot get the final film played on my TV with success.
My work has until now been rendered in blu-ray AVC 1920X1080 interlaced 10Mb/s and the the sound and AVC file "joined" with tsMUXeR in a m2ts file, wich my NAS/TV can play just fine.
When I switch the camera to progressive (I have that Idea that it might be a better picture (maybe I'm wrong) Vegas profile used for rendering is 1920-1080-50P 24Mbps stream (AVC)
the tsMUXeR can join the avc and ac3 but my TV play the file with strange green vertial lines and not smooth, very bad.
I have tried to use DVDA 6.0 but here there is no 50P choice, so I have tried with 24p and 50i DVDA fail in prepare: File name: 00000.m2ts
Status: Vegmuxtw.dll::CTSWrapper::ProcThreadMain::Video buffer underflows. -

Please advice my setting for progressive to final avc (m2ts) file

Comments

PeterDuke wrote on 4/22/2015, 6:41 PM
Can your TV play a 50p clip as recorded directly from your camera without problems?
Johnkl wrote on 4/25/2015, 7:22 AM
unfortunatley I dont have a micro-HDMI cable to I cannot try that, but I have copied the file from the camera to a USB stick, and placed that directly in the TV. That does'nt work, but moving the USB to my BD player, works. Strange
Bu anyway the TV plays the clips just file (via the BD) :-)
PeterDuke wrote on 4/25/2015, 8:27 PM
You seem to have some hardware incompatibility or setup problems. I think only you can sort that out by trial and error, to find out what works best for you. Your BD player may be re-encoding the video.
musicvid10 wrote on 4/25/2015, 9:28 PM
AVCHD is not a delivery format.
It is an acquisition and intermediate format, using Transport Stream, and not Playback Stream protocols.
Therefore, device compatibility and performance is a crapshoot, and mediocre at best!
I truly wish I had $1 for every time I've said that here.
PeterDuke wrote on 4/25/2015, 11:07 PM
Then try encoding it to MP4 and see if that works.
PeterDuke wrote on 4/26/2015, 12:26 AM
What is the make and model of your TV? Do the specs list 1920x1080x50p as one of the supported input formats? If so, what containers or file extensions?
musicvid10 wrote on 4/26/2015, 7:39 AM
"Then try encoding it to MP4 and see if that works."Absolutely that is the thing to try. And at sane bitrates.
Keep file size under 4GB, and set "fast start" streaming option.