PAL DVD to NTSC DVD CS5

I`m using CS5 Production premium and I have edit movie (1440x1080 25fps 1,3333). Pal DVD and blu-ray is ready, but now I need to make Nort American festifal copy NTSC DVD and Blu-ray. Is that so simple that I took squence to media encoder and pick up Format: MPEG2-DVD Present: NTSC 23,976p widescreen and after that I open NTSC project on  Encore and burn DVD. Same thing with Blu-ray? I make test clip this way and it`s look fine VLC player, but I can`t test DVD or Blu-ray because I don`t have pure NTSC stand alone player. Does anyone know this issue? I don`t want to send copy that is not working
properly.  Thank you.

Yes I know, so if that work here that should work and look same
way in pure NTSC player there? Does anyone have experience?

Similar Messages

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

    Hi everyone,
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    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.

  • Workflow PAL equipment to NTSC DVD

    I want to shoot and edit with PAL gear, but I'd like to create an extra NTSC DVD too.
    A. How is that done nowadays in a pro situation, when you could rent or buy whatever you need? What is the ideal source material for dual norm output (PAL & NTSC)
    B. What can I do, using just some PAL camera's (maybe HD, maybe SD only) and a HD edit set?
    >> Time is not an issue: if I have to render a week for the best PAL to NTSC conversion, no problem. I was thinking After Effects and pixel blending...
    >> Please do not reply from hearsay; hands-on pro experience only.

    I have tried a number of software methods and none of them are as good as a Alchemist  hardware convertor. I send my master PAL tape to a Soho facilities house for conversion. About £275 for 2 hours of material.
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  • PAL (25p) - 24p - NTSC DVD

    I have two CanonXL1e (PAL) cameras. I am planning to shoot footage at 25p and conform the clips to 23.98fps, edit in FCP on 23.98fps sequences, and then output to NTSC DVDs at 23.98fps.
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    What is the correct workflow to get from PAL 25p to 24p to NTSC DVD?

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    Or is that 100.1%?
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  • Pal DVD to NTSC DVD

    I have been working in FCP in Pal. My sequence is HDV I have created Pal DVDs but my client now wants a few copies in NTSC for American clients. Can I create NTSC DVDs from my system?

    Click here for information.
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  • PAL disks in NTSC DVD Players...OT I know!

    Hi,
    I'm posting this here because you chaps are the oracle on all things video and I know there's many of you guys who live across the pond...
    In the UK, it's standard nowadays to have NTSC playback on our DVD players.
    How does that work in the US? Is PAL a standard playback format...please don't confuse it with regions...different bag.
    I'm having a large amount of DVD's pressed and many are going to America, I'm wondering how many I need to get done as actual NTSC if I discover that PAL isn't really supported in the US.
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    K.

    Yes. iDVD is NTSC by default, you have to make it PAL.
    I thought you got a warning saying PAL attributes in an NTSC project, but I'm not an expert on anything with an 'i' in front of it.
    Play it in Mac DVD player and get the properties for the file, that will tell you for sure, or of course try playing it in a DVD player you know only supports PAL discs.
    Message was edited by: Ken Evans

  • "PAL" HDV to NTSC DVD

    Wondering if I can go directly from "PAL" HDV (only PAL in the sense that it's 25fps) to NTC m2v (and ac3 obviously) using compressor with as much quality as possible? I usually do standards conversion within fcp using Natresses plug in, but wondering if this is a viable workflow and whether I should adjust the resizing and retiming controls in the compressor presets for maximum quality.

    thanks RedTruck, i will try this!
    quick question:
    is JES deinterlacer the best way to convert the NTSC HDV to PAL HDV (or 1080/60i to 1080/50i)?
    client also now wants this on PAL digibeta, so i'm thinking maybe the easiest way of doing all this is getting everything to 1080/50i HDV PAL, exporting via the camera back to HDV tape then taking the HDV tape to a dub house and have it downconverted there to DigiBeta. from that, reimport as SD PAL to make the PAL DVDs. how does this sound?

  • How to reformat PAL DVD into NTSC DVD

    I have a bunch of PAL DVDs which appear to be unprotected or country coded. They play great on the Mac DVD player but won't play on any of my other players. How about a way to simply reformat please.
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    If the DVD's are retail movies, meaning they are probably encrypted, Toast won't reformat unless the digital file is unencrypted and the region code is 0.
    You can use Mac-the-Ripper to decrypt and then use Toast to re-burn the DVD. (MTR is shareware and may be hard to find-it's illegal to decrypt retail movie DVD's.) You can also use Popcorn to burn the DVD files. Both programs are sold by Roxio.
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    G4 Dual 867 MDD 1GB Ram   Mac OS X (10.4.7)  

  • PAL-authored Final Cut Express project...how to burn to DVD for NTSC audien

    Not sure if this is possible...and through searching a few previous posts it sounds like it may require additional software...but what the heck, thought I'd ask anyway ! I operate in UK and have made several FCE movies for friends in the UK which I've burnt onto a DVD and sent to them as gifts. Now I want to do the same for a friend in the States, and I'm wondering how to go about the PAL>>NTSC issue. Would it be easiest to just take the PAL-dvd and pay somebody at Jessops etc to convert it onto a NTSC dvd for me? I don't mind paying a few quid for someone else to do it, especially if it would require me to go out and buy all kinds of software to be able to do it myself... But I'm worried about how the picture files, music, titling, special effects etc would come out. Anybody have any experience with this? Thanks.

    Not sure if this is possible...and through searching
    a few previous posts it sounds like it may require
    additional software...but what the heck, thought I'd
    ask anyway ! I operate in UK and have made several
    FCE movies for friends in the UK which I've burnt
    onto a DVD and sent to them as gifts. Now I want to
    do the same for a friend in the States, and I'm
    wondering how to go about the PAL>>NTSC issue. Would
    it be easiest to just take the PAL-dvd and pay
    somebody at Jessops etc to convert it onto a NTSC dvd
    for me? I don't mind paying a few quid for someone
    else to do it, especially if it would require me to
    go out and buy all kinds of software to be able to do
    it myself... But I'm worried about how the picture
    files, music, titling, special effects etc would come
    out. Anybody have any experience with this? Thanks.
    Toast 7.x is able to burn a PAL-project on a NTSC-dvd. In the preferences of Toast you can decide wether the output will be a PAL- or a NTSC-dvd.
    For friends in Brazil I burned a NTSC-dvd, but I still don't know if it works!
    Give it a try on a dvd-rw.
    iMac G5 2GHz & Powerbook 12 1.25GHz   Mac OS X (10.4.4)  

  • Can CS5 import from a PAL DVD, then burn a NTSC DVD?

    Hi, I've looked to see if PAL to NTSC has come up in the forum but couldn't spot it.  Has anyone taked the footage from a PAL DVD into CS5?  And is it possible to then send that footage to burn a NTSC DVD?  Thanks for any help!

    The footage will need conversion at some point, and PP may not be the best tool for that job.  Try the link below (but try it quick, it won't be up for long).  If memory serves, one of the options Dan set up was to convert between NTSC and PAL (or in your case, the other way 'round).
    http://www.dv2film.com/

  • Converting NTSC DVD to Blu-ray or PAL DVD

    Why doesn't Encore allow me to change a DVD project to a Blu-ray project with the ability to choose the frame size and rate, or to change an NTSC DVD to a PAL DVD? It looks like the option is there, but they are grayed out.
    I exported my Premier Pro CS3 project for NTSC DVD, PAL DVD and Blu-ray, hoping to simply change to Encore CS3 project type, and then replace the assets with the appropriate file/format exported from Premier.

    >Maybe worth a feature request for CS5?
    God in heaven - NO!
    As Joe just pointed out, these are 2 completely different TV standards, running on different frame rates at different resolutions.
    The results of attempting this "on the fly" with menus etc would very closely resemble a dogs dinner.
    >I would therefore guess that you are stuck with copying the menus and other such assets into a new Encore project for each output format.
    That won't work.
    NTSC is 720x480, PAL is 720x576. They have different PAR as well.
    If compliance is what you need, then design your menus in Square Pixels at 720 x 540, and resize the image (in PS) to the required TV standard before importing into Encore. 16/9 is worse, as you need to use different designs for each TV standard. There are no short-cuts.
    Asset preparation should be done
    i outside
    the authoring application, never
    i in
    it.

  • 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.

  • How do I convert an entire PAL DVD to NTSC, menus and all?

    Hello everyone,
    I've been given a set of PAL DVD's which need to be converted into NTSC. Now, from my understanding, there is no one program available that can do this, so I've had to rip all the video tracks off, convert them to NTSC mp2's and author the DVD from the ground up in DVDSP, build a VIDEO_TS file, then use Toast to compress to a single layer DVD and burn. If anyone knows a program that can convert an entire PAL DVD to NTSC, that would be greatly appreciated.
    The next problem is that when I burn any of the DVD's and put them in a duplication tower (I'm not sure if that's the actual name, but it's one of those machines where you just put the original disc in the top drive and fill the other 8 or so drives under it with blanks), it says that the burn has failed. I have tried another duplication tower and end with the same result. One option I have not tried just yet is to change the brand of media I'm using to burn, but will do so next chance I get.
    I'm not sure if the two problems are related or not, but I just thought it would help.
    Thanks in advance.

    2 options.
    1) Best option - only available if you have the source material - Convert source material from PAL to NTSC using the Nattress standards converter.
    http://www.nattress.com/Products/standardsconversion/standardsconversion.htm
    or the JES deinterlacer:
    http://www.xs4all.nl/~jeschot/home.html
    It's also possible to do this in Compressor but not as good quality and longer render times.
    2) If you don't have the source footage, you'll need to demux the file in MPeg Streamclip:
    http://www.squared5.com/
    then transcode the file as described here:
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=1946985&#1946985

  • 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

  • How to make an NTSC DVD from Pal & NTSC videos using CS3

    Hi!
    I am on CS3, on Windows.
    I need to create an NTSC widescreen DVD from footage that is both NTSC and PAL. Also some of the footage is 4:3 and some 16:9.
    What would be the best way to accomplish this.
    I created an NTSC widescreen project in Premiere CS3. Imported all footage and arranged on timeline.
    While exporting to Encore or to Media Encoder for MPEG 2 DVD - I am constantly getting the error "Failed to return video frame". Or "An unexpected error occured." I am unable to burn even and AVI. I have confirmed, that all audio and video clips are exact duration and that there is no gap between frames on timeline.
    I am able to successfully burn most of the clips individually (except one from about 20 + clips) - but fails when I export them togetether.
    I am racing against time, I have very tight timeline, I need to get it done today :-(
    I would appreciate help from experts on:
    1) What could be causing this error - how can I fix it?
    2) Is the workflow I am using (combining all clips as they are), the way to go - or do I need to do something before I combine/export them for NTSC Widescreen DVD.
    Thanks.
    Rene

    I think you are starting on the wrong track with this, if your source video is a DVD disk then you should not be converting it to anything. You just need the raw mpeg video from the dvd itself. a dvd consists of VOB files but they are really just mpg files with different header information. In most cases you can even rename a .vob file to .mpg and play it with any media player program.
    Anyways you should go download this free program: http://www.svcd2dvd.com/VOB2MPG/default.aspx
    It's a great little simple utility, you point to your video_ts folder and it will export the vob files for each title into a solid .MPG file which you can import into premiere and edit any way you would like. without wasting time or quality encoding to a different medium codec.
    I will say that CS4 is much better at handling mpg files then CS3 if i remember correctly, but see how it works for you.
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