NTSC DVDs

An All Region NTSC format DVD won't play on my iMac. Why? Should it? Thanks.

Kurt
Thanks. The NTSC DVD is the only disc that has failed. It was borrowed from some rather careless friends and was pretty dirty. After cleaning it all is well. Sorry to start a false hare!

Similar Messages

  • PAL DV footage to NTSC DVD help wanted!

    Hi there, apologies if this has been tackled elsewhere, but I couldn't locate it!
    I have a finished PAL edit of around 90 minutes in FCP 4.5 that I have output to a PAL DVD via DVD SP 4/Compressor 2. Following this, the client has also asked for an identical NTSC DVD to send to the USA. Luckily I have the edit still loaded in FCP - therefore: This is the first time I have needed to do a standards conversion. Can anyone advise what the best method/workflow for creating this NTSC DVD is?
    Many thanks in advance for your time, TP
    PowerMac G5, Dual 1.8 ghz, 3GB Ram, 250 GB HD   Mac OS X (10.4.6)   FCP 4.5, DVD SP4, Motion, Toast 6 Titanium

    You didn't understand what my last post said.
    I said go from his PAL DV edit in FCP to a DV tape (DVCam preferrably). Then have the PAL DVCam tape transferred to another DVCam tape in NTSC.
    PAL is better quality that NTSC so there will be some loss just because there is less resolution in NTSC than PAL, but keeping it on a DVCam tape is fine.
    Then log the footage back into FCP with NTSC settings and then edit/export/author.
    I said nothing about tranferring it to analog or VHS. I don't know where you got that one. He said his original footage was edited in DV.
    And YES, if you take it to a "professional" dub house it will turn out better than most software conversions is what i meant. I have used Lightning Media in Hollywood for years and their stuff turns out great.

  • NTSC DVD doc for PAL Europe. Updated Advice on IF I need to convert & HOW?

    I have read with interests several posts on playing NTSC, all region DVDs on PAL DVD players. I hope someone may have some updated advice for my situation. In brief, I would like to give out DVD copies to festival goers in France where my Doc will play in April. I thought to produce DVD-Rs on my Mac.
    With a film acquired documentary(24fps), transferred to NTSC video (29.97 fps) sitting as both Avid and Final Cut Pro Media on my trusty G-4, I am now ready to export a Quicktime Movie and then encode to MPEG-2, and "author" a DVD in DVD Studio Pro.
    Will an NTSC DVD now play on most DVD players and Televisions in Europe? (A contact stated their "players are bi-standard NTSC and PAL", but I'm still uncertain this means my DVD-R or replicated NTSC will play).
    Should I make a PAL DVD?
    IF I try a PAL DVD is it really as simple as exporting a Same as Source Quick Time Movie from Avid or FCP then using the QT MPEG-2 exporter and selecting "PAL" from within Quick Time? Then I just create a new Pal project in DVD Studio Pro?...... Even if it is that simple to create PAL from QT and my media, I don't see how my 24 fps/29.97 fps doc now magically becomes PAL 25 fps / 59.97 fps just because I converted it to MPEG-2.
    Do you all recommend I try to make my own PAL DVD or should I just take my already authored NTSC DVDs and cross my fingers.
    I really appreciate any newer thoughts on this topic. I'm an old pre-digital film guy so be kind.
    Thanks, Rob
    G-4 Quicksilver   Mac OS X (10.3.9)  

    Yes, although the vast majority of newer European DVD players and TVs have no problems with NTSC DVDs, the only way to be sure (well, almost sure) is to burn a PAL DVD. You can't legislate for the fact, however, that not all DVD players can play all DVD-R authored disks, but that's a seperate problem!
    I generally use After Effects for quick and dirty (but good quality) standards conversion. Whatever you do don't just try exporting your project via Quicktime using a PAL as this will only change the colour space and not the frame rate or frame size. If you use QT to change frame rate it will simply repeat every fifth frame to get to 30fps which will give you jerky motion.
    Here's a step by step guide to doing the conversion in Compressor 2, using "optical flow" to interpolate to get the extra frames :
    http://www.macworld.com/2006/02/secrets/marchcreate/index.php?pf=1

  • NTSC DVD Sources Lag with 23.976fps Encode

    I've never had this problem before with other DVD sources but for some reason in this particular project, from the two areas in this compilation that I made with the NTSC DVD-Video content, in the MainConcept h264 23.976fps @ 3000kbps render, the video has this lag/slow motion effect thing going on..  The content is imported with AVISynth.  I've tried everything I can possibly think of: different export settings in the program, adjusting the properties of how the video is processed in the program, tampering with some DGIndex settings, and trying to fix it with different AVISynth code.  Only thing that works is to actually export the video at 29.976 frames per second which.. ruins its quality.  Anybody have ideas as to what the problem might be/how to fix this?  Thanks.

    Unless I didn't understand what you meant, then uh, yeah, that's exactly what I'm trying to do.  I'm trying to get the content that "lags" to be like everything else that "doesn't lag" or just to be normal, if you will..  Besides quality wise, it shouldn't look any different than the source in terms of smoothness of like the motions or w/e..  I will upload three different encode examples of the same clip. If you want, I can also upload the original, but it'd be wrapped in an AVI container. And BTW, obviously aside from the desired framerate, I've tried every combination of settings here but the problem still remained.
    The desired encode settings with 23.976fps framerate (VBR 2-Pass @ 3000kbps with 5000kbps maximum - 396p resolution - Main Profile, Level 4.1 - MP4 multiplexing with PSP/PS3 stream compatibility): http://www.filedropper.com/sequence1
    Same settings but with undesireable 29.97fps framerate: http://www.filedropper.com/sequence2
    VirtualDubMod encode (same bitrate, but CBR - slightly larger resolution - desired 23.976fps framerate): http://www.filedropper.com/sequence5
    Note how the encode from VirtualDubMod has much better quality (more of an effect from the AVISynth code), and how it doesn't have that lag effect.
    *The only reason the VirtualDubMod encode is larger in size is because the audio is uncompressed.

  • Will PAL dvd player play my NTSC DVD-r?

    I'm trying to figure out if I need to convert several NTSC dvd's into PAL format to send to a friend's mom in Israel (she's very sick and would like to see these soon).
    Since I've never converted between these formats, I've been doing lots of research and keep getting more confused. I downloaded JES Deinterlacer (i think thats what its called) but I'm not sure I need it since I read the following on an imovie FAQ website:
    "I have an NTSC project and want a PAL DVD.
    The good news is: You can just send an NTSC disc. Any PAL set top DVD player capable of playing DVD-R discs can also play NTSC discs. All that is needed is a fairly new TV, built in the last 8-10 years or so."
    Could this be true? Can I really just send the NTSC dvd's to her? I hate to waste time here...please help...
    Thanks so much in advance.
    Jenny

    That´s right; NTSC DVDs will always work on PAL players when the player is compliant to the DVD specs. Those players do give out the regular NTSC signal and/or convert to PAL60. Some players can even convert to PAL50. The problem is the TV set.
    My German TV is 14 years old and cannot handle PAL60 or NTSC; I would need one of those rare players that convert to PAL50 (usually with poor results).
    But NTSC DVDs will always work on a PC (when it is an all-region DVD).

  • Switch NTSC DVD slideshow to PAL

    Good morning,
    my wife and I recently received a DVD Slideshow made on a PC in the NTSC format from our Wedding photographers.
    My family lives in Europe and cannot watch NTSC format. Is there a way to make a copy of my slideshow but in the PAL format?
    Thank you very very much.
    P

    Hi
    Usually - NTSC-DVDs plays well in PAL players - but not the other way around.
    So here is my notes on PAL to NTSC. Just think the other way around.
    PAL to NTSC or NTSC to PAL
    A. Copying commercial DVDs - No Not possibly at all - Not even legal to discuss.
    B. Home made DVDs (DVDs without copy protection)
    C. Movies from iMovie or FinalCut
    • Save as full quality QuickTime .mov and convert this with JES_Deinterlacer  (free on internet)
    NTSC ---> PAL.
    • Most often not necessary - Most stand alone PAL DVD-players playback NTSC
    (if TV is old in BL/W)
    PAL ---> NTSC.
    • If played on Mac - not necessary AT ALL
    • If on NTSC DVD-player - CONVERSION IS NEEDED - nearly no Stand alone NTSC-DVD-players
    playback PAL at all.
    To do this You need to convert the PAL DVD to streaming.DV or full quality QuickTime .mov
    • I use Roxio Toast™ to do this (There are no free converter)
    • JES_Deinterlacer  (free on internet) to convert to NTSC
    • Set up an NTSC project (29.97fps or 30) in iDVD and import then burn
    I burn to
    • Verbatim DVD-R
    • Set down burn speed in iDVD to x1 or x4 recommended by many
    • Secure a minimum of 25Gb free space on internal boot hard disk before burning (IMPORTANT)
    PAL is 25 fps and an analog TV standard of 625 lines
    NTSC is 29.97 fps and 520 lines
    NTSC (29.97fps) 520 lines - about 640x480 pixels (square) 720x480 rectangular (narrow) pixels
    PAL  (25 fps)   625   lines - about 768x576 pixels (square) 720x576 rectangular (narrow) pixels
    to use a photo 702x480 resp 576 then add 9 pixels on each side to add together as 720
    If iDVD hangs on PAL or NTSC.
    Bengt W wrote
    Deleting iDVD pref. file - should return You into NTSC mode.
    Yes iDVD can switch to PAL - BUT as You see with a rather lousy result.
    a. Need to convert to PAL - most often not - Most PAL-player can playback NTSC
    and on a fairly new TV in color. (old TV in Bl/W)
    (Other way around - from PAL to NTSC most often a must - few NTSC-player can use PAL)
    b. IF MUST - then use JES_Deinterlacer to do this conversion - so much better and free.
    My list on this (or rather PAL --> NTSC - just think the other way around)
    Allosaurus writes
    Thank you SDMacuser. I dumped all the plist icons with no result, and was getting pretty plist off when it occurred to me to delete all the previous dvd.proj files. Bingo. That did the trick. So thank you for all your help and the additional information you provided.
    Yours Bengt W

  • Highest res 16:9 for NTSC dvd

    I am making an i-dvd
    it does NOT accept ProRes files!! :/
    two questions.. what is the HIGHEST/LOSSLESS quality codec I should be using?
    PNG? JPEG?
    second question. i am making a regular DVD
    but i want it to RESPECT 16:9 framing - meaning that a dvd player will know to scan the image and blow up to 16:9 (vs. black bars at 4:3)
    so in respect to this, is there an HD codec that will give me the most resolution possible on a regular NTSC dvd player?
    i have FSC 3. but i fear DVD studio pro, since it looks like the cockpit of a 747... im just a single prop pilot, if you know what i mean...
    thanks!

    I tend to think of contributors to this forum as stuck way out in the prairie somewhere with their Mbps running off an old car battery, working away to the sound of cattle lowing and sheep
    bleeting
    On the other hand if you are in shouting distance of an Apple store and are a thick
    like me, then One to One is unbeatable value and will
    sort you out on 90% at least of the problems that come up
    here. Even if you can only get in once a month it's a good deal: and I bet Apple can fix it do you can
    have more than one session at a time if you
    live miles away. And if Apple are Reading this (if!) a box of blank dvds'd come in very handy thank
    you!
    John

  • Producing NTSC dvd's from PAL projects

    Hi
    I'm in Australia (PAL) but would like to produce dvd's that can be viewed in the USA.
    If I produce a NTSC version of my PAL filmed project in idvd, will it work in NTSC dvd players in the USA?

    when you set iDVD to NTSC/29.97 and import a PAL iMovie, iDVD will convert your material and creates a NTSC videoDVD ...
    ... my experience, going vice versa, NTSC >>PAL, told me, that the underlying QTengine doesn't show a good result.. so, the long way for a probably better result is:
    export your iM as 'QT/Full Quality' ..
    download and use for free JES Deinterlacer
    open your iMexport, choose 'Project, conversion' and let JESDI do the conversion..
    drop THAT new file into a NTSC iDVD project..

  • Build - Generates an "NTSC DVD requires at least one AC3 or PCM Audio track"

    I'm using the trial version to make my first DVD with Encore. All went fairly smoothly until I went to "build" the DVD and received the "NTSC DVD requires at least one AC3 or PCM Audio track..." message. I continued with the build and tested the DVD. All the audio was fine except for audio assigned to my menus via the audio section, assigned from the motion tab, was not heard on the DVD. The Menu audio did however sound good from the preview mode. The audio that I tried to use in the motion audio field, was from a M2P file from the same clip that worked fine on the DVD. The video field was not set to anything on the motion menu.
    My questions are: 1) How do I clear the error? 2) How do I get the Audio on my menus?
    (Not sure if this item belonged in the forum, the error forum, or the audio forum - Sorry).
    I don't even know for a fact that the error message was tied directly to the menu. I'm sure its something basic that I just missed - Thanks.
    Eric

    Thanks you very much, now I will be able to sleep tonight. My editing system (Edius) had both the ability to export my sound track to PCM AIFF & PCM WAVE, which worked great for the sound on the menus, as well as an elementary stream (M2V) format which worked good for the main sound track. I looked in the Audio Forum to find out about the elementary streams. The end result is that my DVD build error cleared as well as getting audio on the menu.
    Once again, thank you both for your help.

  • Same project in CS5 to PAL DVD and NTSC DVD.

    Hi everyone,
    I am trying to find best solution how to do it. My project is slideshow with scaled JPEG images and some video clips from DSLR camera Canon T3i.
    I know that video is 16:9 (1920x1080, 29.97fr) ratio and my output should be 4:3 ratio. With this I can deal with no problems, because is just few clips. My conclusion is: How to deal with PAL SD 4:3 ( 720x576, 25fr) ratio and NTSC SD 4:3 (720x480, 29.97fr) and a lot of images. What sequence settings I should use for the project? What I can think: start with DV PAL after everything is done put in DV NTSC sequence and scale it? Any other thoughts, please?
    Thank you, Art

    I was recently faced with a problem on an HD NTSC video that I videoed and produced.  The customer wanted a DVD that relatives over in Germany could view.  My concern was how to produce and test a PAL version.  My good friend Harm advised me that any DVD player in Pal-land has the capability of playing NTSC DVD video disks!   It worked fine.

  • PAL/NTSC DVD player question

    Greetings, Can I play a PAL format DVD from the UK in my Powerbook? Here is the info. from system profiler:
    MATSHITA DVD-R UJ-835E:
    Firmware Revision: GAN7
    Interconnect: ATAPI
    Burn Support: Yes (Apple Shipped/Supported)
    Cache: 2048 KB
    Reads DVD: Yes
    CD-Write: -R, -RW
    DVD-Write: -R, -RW, +R, +RW
    Burn Underrun Protection CD: Yes
    Burn Underrun Protection DVD: Yes
    Write Strategies: CD-TAO, CD-SAO, DVD-DAO
    Media: No
    I have read that if you play a PAL format DVD more than five time my settings will be permanently locked in the PAL format, and I will no longer be able to play commercial NTSC DVD's. Which would be bad. I do travel allot with the Powerbook and watch movies on the plane. Should I consider converting all PAL DVD's into NTSC? If anyone could shed light on this please advise. Thanks.

    Here's the work-around I use, which just requires that you have enough free space on your hard drive to hold the entire VIDEO_TS file (up to 8 GB): Download the freeware program Mac the Ripper (Google it, then find a site that MacroVision hasn't hacked into and shut down, and proceed with the download and installation). Insert the DVD you want to watch. The DVD player in your Mac will then ask you if you want to use one of your few remaining region switches. IGNORE that dialog box altogether--just leave it open without selecting anything (if you select CANCEL it'll eject your DVD, so don't do that).
    Open Mac the Ripper and following the clear instruction manual to set the controls properly copy the DVD into your Mac (I choose to save the file in the Movie folder). Takes about 20-25 minutes for most movies, and the copy you get is stripped of region coding. When that is done, close MTR, go back to the dialog box of your DVD player, hit CANCEL, and let the disk eject. Then reopen the DVD player, and have it open the VIDEO_TS file. Playback will proceed as if you were watching the DVD itself.
    PS-if you want to burn a DVD backup stripped of region coding, you can use DVD2oneX2, a file-compression/DVD burning program available for a free 30-day trial, $30 thereafter. Works very well. Good luck & (hopefully) enjoy!

  • PAL & NTSC DVDs--an Option?

    I have an extensive collection of PAL & NTSC DVDs. The G5 has a (lower) empty optical drive slot. If I install another Superdrive will I be able to set it up to exclusively use this to play PAL regions 2 & 4 DVDs without locking the G5 permanently into this format i.e. use the first drive to still play NTSC Region 1 DVDs only? I understand that the manual says the the format choice can only be changed 5 times, but it is not clear to me if this statement applies only to the optical drives or the computer itself. I certainly do not want to make an irreversible choice for the G5!
    Any help will be appreciated.

    So... You are confusing video standard (format) with region codes here. The optical drives in Macs (most) are region code locked, meaning that they will only play disks from one region (and that region may be changed up to 5 times before the hardware gets stuck). It doesn't care what video format is on the disk from that region (NTSC or PAL), and it doesn't care about region-free disks (recordable DVDs, and commercial region-free disks).
    On the Mac, the region locking is managed by firmware on the drive itself, so you can have one drive per region, if you like.
    It might be more convenient to upgrade the firmware on the drive (depending on what model you have) to a region-free version of the firmware. As you may or may not be aware, the US is a WIPO signatory country and is prohibited from recognizing region codes as a form of copy protection or copyright control. Apple includes region code locks on their drives, ostensibly at the behest of their peers in the media industry, but it's perfectly OK for you to remove it (and, there are locales where region code locking is actually prohibited, but presumably if you bought your Mac there the locks are already absent). Be aware, however, that changing the firmware of the drive would void the warranty on the drive (not the whole Mac, just the DVD drive).
    Another option might be to purchase an external region-free DVD drive.

  • How do I export a 720p 30fps video that is suitable for NTSC DVD authoring?

    I have some 720p HD videos, but they are 30fps. I want to encode them (using a separate program) to SD MPEG-2 for authoring an NTSC DVD. How do I conform these files to the 29.97fps frame rate needed for DVD authoring? Do I export the video as is @30fps, but set the MPEG-2 encoder to use 29.97fps during the encode? Will that sync cause problems or stuttering? Or do I need to do something else to the video before it can be encoded to MPEG-2?
    I am quite new to using HD video, and never had to work with 30fps material before.

    What camera did you shoot this on?  Also I thought you said all the clips were 720p, the reason I'm asking what camera you shot this stuff is because with several camera's even though they say 720p they are actually recording as 720PsF which will appear to cs4 as interlaced footage. It also appears as interlaced to FCP and also media info and Gspot.
    http://provideocoalition.com/index.php/atepper/story/psf8217s_missing_workflow_em_part_1_b enign_psf_versus_malignant_psf/

  • NTSC DVD created with iMovie 6.0.3. Need to convert to PAL.

    Is there a way to do this without starting over? Can I switch iMovie from NTSC to PAL? Can I take my iMovie NTSC project and copy it to a new iMovie window after switching the preferences to PAL? Would that keep chapters in place? Can Toast or something do this? I sure hate to totally start over.

    Hi
    Please Karsten
    b) export your iMovie project; drag the resulting file into a new PAL IDVD project; iDVD will ask you to keep or change the standard
    IS NO GOOD WAY at all - It works but resulting DVD is barely viewable ! (jumpy, un-sharp and really bad)
    a) is an excellent choice as long as TV is fairly modern - else result will be Bl/W
    My notes on this:
    PAL to NTSC or NTSC to PAL
    A. Copying commercial DVDs - No Not possibly at all - Not even legal to discuss.
    B. Home made DVDs (DVDs without copy protection)
    C. Movies from iMovie or FinalCut
    • Save as full quality QuickTime .mov and convert this with JES_Deinterlacer  (free on internet)
    NTSC ---> PAL.
    • Most often not necessary - Most stand alone PAL DVD-players playback NTSC
    (if TV is old in BL/W)
    PAL ---> NTSC.
    • If played on Mac - not necessary AT ALL
    • If on NTSC DVD-player - CONVERSION IS NEEDED - nearly no Stand alone NTSC-DVD-players
    playback PAL at all.
    To do this You need to convert the PAL DVD to streaming.DV or full quality QuickTime .mov
    • I use Roxio Toast™ to do this (There are no free converter)
    • JES_Deinterlacer  (free on internet) to convert to NTSC
    • Set up an NTSC project (29.97fps or 30) in iDVD and import then burn
    I burn to
    • Verbatim DVD-R
    • Set down burn speed in iDVD to x1 or x4 recommended by many
    • Secure a minimum of 25Gb free space on internal boot hard disk before burning (IMPORTANT)
    PAL is 25 fps and an analog TV standard of 625 lines
    NTSC is 29.97 fps and 520 lines
    NTSC (29.97fps) 520 lines - about 640x480 pixels (square) 720x480 rectangular (narrow) pixels
    PAL  (25 fps)   625   lines - about 768x576 pixels (square) 720x576 rectangular (narrow) pixels
    to use a photo 702x480 resp 576 then add 9 pixels on each side to add together as 720
    If iDVD hangs on PAL or NTSC.
    Bengt W wrote
    Deleting iDVD pref. file - should return You into NTSC mode.
    Yes iDVD can switch to PAL - BUT as You see with a rather lousy result.
    a. Need to convert to PAL - most often not - Most PAL-player can playback NTSC
    and on a fairly new TV in color. (old TV in Bl/W)
    (Other way around - from PAL to NTSC most often a must - few NTSC-player can use PAL)
    b. IF MUST - then use JES_Deinterlacer to do this conversion - so much better and free.
    My list on this (or rather PAL --> NTSC - just think the other way around)
    I have to send it overseas
    That too can be a problem. As USA = NTSC = 29.97fps and EU = PAL = 25fps.
    DO Not let iMovie or iDVD do this conversion from one to the other - Result will be Very
    BAD
    I save the movie as a full quality QuickTime .mov file then I use JES_Deinterlacer to do the conversion - then I cont. in iMovie or iDVD with project set accordingly.
    JES_Deinterlacer is free on Internet and there are Pro applications but not that much better and costs are astronomical.
    PAL-DVDs - don't play in US
    NTSC-DVDs - usually plays well in EU
    All plays well on a Mac - What ever.
    Allosaurus writes
    Thank you SDMacuser. I dumped all the plist icons with no result, and was getting pretty plist off when it occurred to me to delete all the previous dvd.proj files. Bingo. That did the trick. So thank you for all your help and the additional information you provided.
    Yours Bengt W

  • Can iMOVIE HD convert a PAL DVD to a NTSC DVD?

    That was all! Can iMOVIE HD convert a PAL DVD to a NTSC DVD? That's my only question. Thanks.

    Hi
    A. Commersial DVDs - No Not at all - Not even legal to discuss.
    B. Home made DVDs (without copy protection)
    NTSC ---> PAL.
    • Most often not necessary - Most stand alone PAL-DVD players playback NTSC
    (if TV is old in BL/W)
    PAL ---> NTSC.
    • If played on Mac - not necessary AT ALL
    • If on NTSC-DVD-player - CONVERSION IS NEEDED - nearly no Stand alone NTSC-DVD-players
    playback PAL at all.
    To do this You need to conver the PAL DVD to streaming.DV
    • I use Roxio Toast™ to do this (There are no free converter)
    • MPEG Streamclip (free on internet) to convert to NTSC
    • Set up an NTSC project (29.97fps or 30) in iDVD and import then burn
    I burn to
    • Verbatim DVD-R
    • Set down burn speed in iDVD to x1 or x4 recommended by many
    • Secure a minimum of 25Gb free space on internal boot hard disk before burning (IMPORTANT)
    Yours Bengt W

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