Did someone remember NTSC to PAL litle converter...?

Once upon a time on this forum, there is a thread about NTSC to PAL conversion. Someone provide a link to download some very good little converter which is free BTW. I dont remember its name but am sure that someone here can help me. So please any input is apreciated.

I have NOT used the products below, I only forward due to other mentions
$99 http://www.corel.com/servlet/Satellite/us/en/Product/1175714228541#tabview=tab0
$99 http://www.womble.com/products/mvw.html
$90 http://www.magix.com/us/movie-edit-pro/ plus $5 Ship
$80 http://www.nchsoftware.com/prism/index.html
$75 http://www.videoredo.com/en/index.htm
$70 http://www.nchsoftware.com/prism/index.html Converter
$40 http://www.daniusoft.com/dvd-ripper.html#135
$40 http://www.deskshare.com/dmc.aspx Digital Media Converter
$20 http://www.topsoftwareol.com/product/Video/Video_Converter_Standard.html
$00 http://www.dvddecrypter.org.uk/ or http://www.mrbass.org/dvdrip/
$00 http://www.squared5.com/ MPEG Streamclip Converter
$00 http://www.erightsoft.com/SUPER.html Multi-Converter <-- supposed to be very good
$00 http://www.virtualdub.org/ Mpeg to AVI Converter

Similar Messages

  • Converting NTSC to PAL with chapter markers

    Hey guys,
    I have just a quick question.
    I am making a home made video. I did all the editing in FCP and made a great DVD in iDVD. I would like to do the same thing in PAL format so I can send it to my parents in Europe. My original footage is in NTSC. I did my own research and tried using compressor to change format to PAL.
    I tried several different settings (PAL DV, Mpeg 2 PAL) but the outcome movie is always missing chapter markers.
    I also tried to import the PAL movie (after conversion in Compressor) to FCP and added chapter markers but did not work.
    Does anybody know how to convert the format from NTSC to PAL and keep the chapter markers at the same time? I would like to mantain as high quality as possible.
    Thanks for your help.
    iMac G5 Intel Core Duo   Mac OS X (10.4.8)  
    iMac G5 Intel Core Duo   Mac OS X (10.4.8)  

    Well, this seemed to work. However, being completely new to converting to PAL, I was surprised to see the "jumpiness" that goes along with the frame rate drop. Looking at it taxes the eyes as it seems like its dropping frames every so often. I realize, through more research that this is due to the 25 FPS nature of PAL plus the fact that I'm converting and not just authoring from PAL material. Having said this, is there a tried and true way of "smoothing" this jumpiness that anyone would share?
    A friend of mine suggested that when I place the file into DVDSP, I choose the TOP field in the encoding tab, prior to burning the disk. In the past I have always left the FIELD menu set at Auto. He says that setting it to TOP might help a little.
    He also told me that a lot of the software based converters don't do the best of jobs. Although acceptable results may come from tweaking the settings, the best way to convert NTSC to PAL (with the most pleasing results) is by using a very high end converter (not a computer). Although you have to weigh out the circumstances such as how many disks will eventually be converted compared to available budget, is it worth spending a little extra for a master that will ultimately see 1,000 copies?
    I'm planning on showing my client the burn with field dominance set to TOP, on Monday. Hopefully she'll find it acceptable and I'll be able to move on with this project. Thanks for all the help!
    Steve
    Power Mac, G5   Mac OS X (10.4.6)  

  • Converting NTSC to PAL without dropping frames... possible?

    Hi Guys,
    I am trying to convert some footage from NTSC to PAL in FCP, now I have managed to do it in a way that stops the image being distorted but I have yet to find a way to convert without getting slightly noticeable jumping (which I can only assume is down to the 4/5 dropped frames). Is there any way of doing so or does the footage need to be sent off to a specialist?
    Cheers!

    Get Nattress Standards Converter. It really is the best way to go. Very quick and with fantasic results.
    In that thread that Bogie indicated, it took me 30 min to capture and convert the footage...this with 15 min of material ( I used 10 seconds)
    Shane
    "There's no need to fear, UNDERDOG is here!"

  • NTSC to PAL - Audio: One converter speeds it up, one doesn't

    I have tested both DV Atlantis and JES Deinterlacer to convert NTSC DV to PAL DV and, image-wise, they both do a good job (although JES is much, much faster)
    However with the audio: Atlantis speeds up the soundtrack by 5% (resulting in a higher pitch) but JES does not. The soundtrack sounds the same as the original NTSC.
    I'm confused. Doesn't converting to PAL always result in a speed-up soundtrack? Am I getting "true" PAL with JES? Why do the 2 programs handle audio differently?
    Thanks

    What version of Compressor are you using? Compressor 2 has frame rate conversion settings under the Frame Controls tab (offering various levels of quality).
    In any case, you might want to try the freeware utility JES Deinterlacer since it supports fairly good NTSC to PAL conversion using either frame blending or a form of inverse telecine (to convert from NTSC's 29.97fps to PAL's 25fps). If you're using Compressor 1.X then this may be your best option unless you are willing to spend some money on an alternative, third-party solution.
    You can download JES Deinterlacer from VersionTracker.com -- it comes with instructions.<small><hr width="75%"><small>If this suggestion helps in any way, a confirmation or acknowledgment would be appreciated, since that would also help others who may be having the same difficulty. Do for others as you would have them help you.<center>Thanks for sharing, Waymen.</center></small>

  • Workflow for converting NTSC to PAL with Premiere/AME

    Hi everyone,
    After searching the forums, I see that to convert NTSC to PAL for  standard def DVD, most recommend using Canopus Procoder software for the  MPEG2 encoding, or using a hardware based solution.  I don't have the  money for those options, so I was hoping you could clear up something  for me.  Which of these options is best?:
    Option #1:  import the NTSC footage into Premiere and edit on a NTSC  timeline with settings matching the original footage.  Then use Adobe  Media Encoder to encode a PAL format MPEG2 file for the standard def  DVD.
    Option #2:  import the NTSC footage into Premiere and edit on a  timeline set up with PAL resolution and framerate settings, and simply  scale up the NTSC footage to match the larger PAL resolution.  Then use  Adobe Media Encoder to encode a PAL format MPEG2 file for the standard  def DVD.
    Thanks for the help!!
    Mike
    Intel i7-930 2.8GHz
    12 GB RAM
    1 GB VRAM
    Adobe CS 5

    pal to ntsc is not quite the same as ntsc to pal.
    pal has more scanlines and there for makes a better end result to ntsc than ntsc to pal.
    Usually ntsc converted to pal does not look very good on a tv.
    That's why i recommend to leave it in ntsc, most pal players can be switched to ntsc.

  • Any tutorials on converting HD NTSC to PAL?

    I have footage that was shot on a JVC camera, saved in a FCP file on a DVD disc. I was able to load the footage from the DVD onto the FCP timeline.
    How can I covert it to PAL?
    I have tried to understand the posts in this forum but everything is in bits and pieces. Are there any step-by-step instructions or tutorials available any where? Or is this process done by purchasing more software?
    I have a Mac OS X, 4 x 2.5 GHz PowerPC G5.
    Any hope?

    You can convert NTSC to PAL using Compressor.
    Other alternatives for standards conversion:
    [JES Deinterlacer|http://www.xs4all.nl/~jeschot/home.html] -decent quality and free.
    [Natress Standards Conversion|http://www.nattress.com/Products/standardsconversion/standardsconver sion.htm] -great quality, costs $100.
    Or.... Take the original to a production facility that has either a Terranex or Snell & Wilcox converter. This will cost money so shop around. But you will get excellent results and it is real time, the other methods all take a very long time, even with a powerful high end Mac.

  • Converting a video to watch overseas NTSC to Pal

    Hello.....I am going to create a photo montage using imovie and idvd. I will later be making copies and I have had a request for a copy for overseas, could anyone give me their suggestions on how I should do this properly. Is it simply going into the idvd "project" drop down mode and change the video setting from NTSC to Pal?
    Also I believe that the dvd will be needed for Germany, I do not know what format they are in. I am guessing that they are in the PAL format but I am not sure. Does anyone know this?
    Thanks so much in advance.

    Yes, Germany (and the rest of W Europe) uses PAL.
    And as Kirk says, all modern DVD players sold in Europe play NTSC as well.
    Which apparently is not the case in the US (playing PAL DVDs).

  • DVD burn for a French Mother-in-Law: NTSC or PAL?

    Hi All,
    I've just finished a DVD slideshow of my recent wedding to send to my Mother-in-Law in france. Should I burn it using NTSC or PAL format?
    I remember there's a problem of watching videos taped in France in the UK...
    Many Thanks
    Paul

    sorry Sue to correct you (you're reading the wrong books <<THAT was a joke! only Sue understands....)...
    don't mix two things:
    video standards and region codes....
    Europe is rc2 and PAL (...well, France is SECAM... but for DVD it is... PAL)
    so, iDVD creates rc0 (=playable everywhere), BUT you shouldn't use it for video-conversion... luckyly, our European DVDstandalones accept NTSC DVDs and most Tellys are able to show the content..... (not vice versa with US/NTSC land)
    Spud, you haven't told us what video standard you did the recording...? (huuu, this is an international board.... , world's a little larger then... letssay Illinois... )
    if NTSC- stay NTSC and wait for mother's commends...
    if you need a video-standard conversion, use JES Deinterlacer for converting movie (export from iM as dv stream/let SC convert/import new file into iDVD)

  • HD NTSC to PAL Debacle

    Dear Compression sages,
    I'm attempting to convert my NTSC DVCpro HD 720 Quicktime to PAL to make a PAL DVD in DVDSP. So I need a PAL mpeg2. My trouble starts here.
    In compression I followed all the settings to convert to PAL. The resulting mpeg was a little rough in terms of quality, but it was the best I could get it. It seemed to play alright.
    But to my horror when I dropped the clip into the DVDSP timeline I discovered that all the subtitles I had made in my NTSC DVDSP project gradually went out of sync. The DVDSP project had been fully converted to PAL, every menu. But this gradual de-syncing of the subtitles confused me. And this is not the kind of project that I can easily move the subtitles over. 26 min, heavy on the lines, 5 subtitle tracks.
    I checked the audio sync and it seemed to be in sync, but I couldn't be clinically certain frames weren't being dropped towards the end. I did some research and discovered that many people had been having trouble with conversions from NTSC to PAL. Out of sync audio issues, frames being dropped, etc.
    In desperation I consulted a friend, who recommended I use a FCP plug-in to do the conversion called Nattress Standards Conversion. He said he had had frame dropping issues with other transfers, but that the NSD plug-in had worked great.
    I downloaded the plug-in, and attempted to follow the instructions (bellow) only to find that on step 9, it did not recognize the proper aspect ratio of my HD footage, giving me 4:3 instead of 6:9. I tried switching a few settings, but to no avail. Everytime I dragged and dropped the origional source clip into the filter interface the clip in the viewer altered to 4:3 ratio. Blast, I thought. Probably some little setting I will never discover.
    So here I am, back on the compression forums. Has anyone successfully used compressor to convert NTSC HD to PAL without getting drop frames or subtitles gradually going out of sync? How on earth do I do this conversion without horrific results?
    NTSC to PAL conversion for Nattress:
    1. edit the NTSC clip to an PAL timeline
    2. nest the NTSC clip to allow the plugin to scale the converted clip. Because the pixel
    dimensions of NTSC video are smaller than PAL, the clip will appear shrunk down in
    the timeline canvas viewer. This is normal. The nesting of the clip will allow the
    plugin to correctly scale it to PAL pixel dimensions. (select clip and go to the Se-
    quence Menu and select Nest Items - make sure the pixels dimensions of the nest
    are PAL sized)
    3. apply the G Converter plugin to the nested sequence in the PAL timeline. Make sure
    the plugin goes onto the nest itself, not the clip that it contains.
    4. open the nest in the viewer (control click on the nest and select "Open in viewer" or
    select nest then press return)
    5. select the filter tab in the viewer
    6. set the correct settings for the desired conversion. In this case, we select Source
    Pixel size to be 720 x 480 (NTSC), lower field order for source (in this case a NTSC
    DV clip) and destination (PAL DV timeline).
    7. if you desire the PAL output to be de-interlaced, this can be performed in one step by
    selecting progressive output
    8. if you would like to experiment with the conversion algorithm using "Smart De-
    Interlacing" then this can be selected in the De-Interlace options. The Tolerance
    control affects the smart de-interlace and it's effects can be seen by selecting "View
    Smart Mask" in the De-Interlace Options.
    9. the original NTSC clip that was edited to the PAL timeline must now be dropped from
    the project browser onto the Source Clip image well in the filter. The plugin will use
    this video clip for all the image data for the conversion. This is the important step
    that makes this plugin different from any other, and is vital to it's successful operation.

    I downloaded the plug-in, and attempted to follow the instructions (bellow) only to find that on step 9, it did not recognize the proper aspect ratio of my HD footage, giving me 4:3 instead of 6:9. I tried switching a few settings, but to no avail. Everytime I dragged and dropped the origional source clip into the filter interface the clip in the viewer altered to 4:3 ratio. Blast, I thought. Probably some little setting I will never discover.
    Email Graeme Nattress with your problem. He does a good job supporting his plugins.
    x

  • IMovie - Changing From NTSC To PAL & Other Way Around

    I want to make a dvd in pal format and at present its only doing them in NTSC format. I've looked at the help on the site which states:
    iMovie initially set all projects to PAL or NTSC video depending on the type of camcorder or device you connect to the computer, or the format of the first video you import.
    To set new projects to be NTSC or PAL, follow these steps:
    Update to iMovie 3.0.3 or later. It is available from the iMovie website (http://www.apple.com/imovie/). iMovie 4 is available as part of iLife (http://www.apple.com/ilife).
    Open iMovie.
    From the iMovie menu, choose Preferences.
    Change "New Projects are:" to either NTSC or PAL.
    Now I'm using 6.0.1 but I can't see "New Projects are" anywhere under the preferences in iMovie HD, can someone please offer me some suggestions as although this is my first mac I've had a pc for sometime so I'm not totally clueless about changing options and looking where to find these things....

    With iMovie 6.0.1 the wording has changed slightly. In preferences, under 'General', you now want 'New Project Frame Rate:'. Set to 25 fps for PAL, and 29.97 fps for NTSC.
    Presumably, as you're in the UK, all your imported footage is in PAL format anyway. If you are importing NTSC footage, but want to export in PAL, I would suggest that you convert the NTSC to PAL before importing it.
    iMac G5 20in 1.8 Ghz   Mac OS X (10.4.5)   2 GB RAM

  • NTSC to PAL / 24fps

    Hi guys,
    I'm shooting a tv show for MTV tr in New York City and since it will air in Europe it has to be set in PAL so I am unsure on how to deal with the settings.
    I have NTSC 24fps footage that needs to be edited. My question is when I start a new project in Premiere CS3 should I choose NTSC or PAL or should I start editing in NTSC and convert it to PAL?
    Second question, when I import the footage in Premiere which, is located in my external hard drive with usb 2.0, the video seems jerky or choppy on the camera movements such as panning and any fast camera moves. Do you know how or where I can adjust this problem? Could it be that my project was shot in 24 fps and the new project file fps is 29.97? I didn't change any fps settings in the new project, so I assumed it's automatically 29.97.
    My computer:
    Windows XP
    2.80GHz Pentium D CPU
    2.00GB RAM
    Third question, should I render my project and burn a DVD or does it render when you burn a DVD automatically?
    Can anyone please help me with this?
    Thank you so much!
    Firat

    From what you have described and looking at the specs I feel there is little chance of your program being accepted for television anywhere.
    Need some answers...
    What camera was used to shoot the footage at 24fps? Is it DV or HDV?
    Why did you not choose a project setting of 24fps rather than 29.97?
    Why did you use USB to transfer files rather than Firewire?
    Capturing USB sort of indicates that your camera is DVD or HDD based and using Mpeg files which CS3 doesn't like, nor do TV stations.
    Don't worry too much about burning a DVD until you work out if the footage is editable.

  • Ntsc to pal conversion

    what is the best settings in COMPRESSOR to convert a DV file from NTSC to PAL (that will not take 4 days to convert one hour....)

    If you think of your time as worth, oh $50/hr then all you need to do is save 2hrs and the software has paid for itself. Any speed increases after that are pure profit.
    If your your time has no monetary value, then I can appreciate your desire to use compressor for this.
    Hopefully someone will chime in with settings.
    Good luck.
    x

  • NTSC to PAL or PAL to NTSC

    I have a client shooting a project in a couple of days and they are wondering what is the best frame rate to shoot at. They will be shooting to HDCAM SR 1920 x 1080 4:2:2 YCbCr 10 bit or to a drive 2880 x 2160 RAW 12 bit Bayer data. If they shoot 2k, the files would be rendered out into 1920 x 1080 Quicktimes to work with.
    Ultimately, the project will end up as 1000 NTSC DVDs and 1000 PAL DVDs.
    I will be editing with FCP and creating the DVD with DVDSP.
    I had received advice to shoot everything PAL 25fps, and then convert the final product to NTSC. We never work with PAL so I was wondering if it would be better to shoot NTSC and then convert the final product to PAL.
    I'm new to PAL so any advice, information or links to other posts/workflows will be appreciated.
    Thanks,
    Chris

    G.
    One of the advantages of Shooting with a PAL camera is that you don't have too many frame rates to worry about and no pull down is needed.
    You can shoot PAL (50 fields per second as opposed to NTSC 60 ) at 25frames ps (or better 50fps, talk to your DoP about this) edit easily with FCP on a PAL timeline and eventually convert to NTSC using [Nattress Standard Converter|http://www.nattress.com/Products/standardsconversion/standardsconvers ion.htm] or Compressor 3.
    However, there are a couple of things you can take into account:
    1)most DVD players nowadays can play both PAL and NTSC (Not all though)
    2)If you are used to a specific workflow stick with it or do some tests before you take any decision.
    You could shoot with a PAL camera and edit a few minutes in FCP, do a standard conversion with Compressor then encode and import the asset in DVDSP to burn a DVD to see if you are happy.
    Testing is a crucial step of the work and hiring the camera for half a day will cost you much less than a rushed decision.
    Best,
    G.

  • NTSC to PAL DVD

    I am attempting to make a PAL DVD in DVDSP 3. I changed the disc and encoding settings to PAL and encoded my stand alone movie from media 100 which was 720x480 as PAL.
    I watch the DVD on my g4 apple dvd player and it's fine, but when I watched it on my apex dvd player, I saw these lines running across horizontally. Thick lines, mostly on fast motion, but other places too.
    When my client watches the same dvd on his computer, (mac 0s 9 i believe) he sees what I see on the apex.
    Question: Is this normal, since my monitor is NTSC to see these lines? Normally when I've watched a PAL piece on a PAL player on an NTSC monitor, I see color problems and tracking problems... but not these lines...
    Also: What is good for a stand alone program, to convert files from NTSC to PAL?
    Thanks in advance to anyone who can help me.

    You can't just encode from one standard to another
    You need to use a standards converter, or have original PAL footage
    What do you mean by "I changed the disc and encoding settings to PAL and encoded my stand alone movie from media 100?"
    Just changing to PAL in DVD SP if the original footage is NTSC doesn't change the source footage and creates a PAL DVD.

  • NTSC to PAL Compression for DVD Studio Pro

    I am trying to make PAL MPEG2s using Compressor. My videos are roughly 15 minutes long (I have 6 going onto one DVD). I altered one of the Presets to PAL, 16x9, one pass VBR, 4.5 to 7 data rate, best for the motion setting. And I get the typical odd chunky feeling during motion within the frame. Meaning frames look removed (or added) during movement. I looked at it not only on my MAC but on a PAL DVD routed to a true PAL monitor.
    Any advice for settings I should try? I have two tests rendering - I moved up to 2 pass VBR, 5-8 data rates, better motion and best motion. I should be able to look at them this evening; but from the folks I talked to, I'm not hopeful. Has anyone figured a way to make PAL MPEG2s look good short of having PAL masters made and a large Post house do the files on their very expensive equipment?
    Thanks,
    Cindy S.

    What version of Compressor are you using? Compressor 2 has frame rate conversion settings under the Frame Controls tab (offering various levels of quality).
    In any case, you might want to try the freeware utility JES Deinterlacer since it supports fairly good NTSC to PAL conversion using either frame blending or a form of inverse telecine (to convert from NTSC's 29.97fps to PAL's 25fps). If you're using Compressor 1.X then this may be your best option unless you are willing to spend some money on an alternative, third-party solution.
    You can download JES Deinterlacer from VersionTracker.com -- it comes with instructions.<small><hr width="75%"><small>If this suggestion helps in any way, a confirmation or acknowledgment would be appreciated, since that would also help others who may be having the same difficulty. Do for others as you would have them help you.<center>Thanks for sharing, Waymen.</center></small>

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