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Thread ID: 118823 2011-06-22 10:24:00 MPEG2 problem Driftwood (5551) Press F1
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1211153 2011-06-22 10:24:00 We have a Panasonic TH-P42X20Z TV which is supposed to play MPEG2 Video from a SD Card. It will read MP3 music & JPG picture but not MPEG2.
Have done the conversions with Koyotesoft free converter & they play ok on other devices.
Driftwood (5551)
1211154 2011-06-23 00:14:00 TVs are not computers - they are very picky. (Something I learned from ChillingS in connection with USB wifi adapters)

There's probably something in your file's MPEG2 settings that your TV doesn't like.

You could drag one of the MPEG2 files into the freeware MediaInfo to provide a read-out of the settings. Copy and paste here
BBCmicro (15761)
1211155 2011-06-23 01:04:00 ;)

It could be some kind of container issue, or the way that the MPEG2 is encoded, or right the way down to the actual naming of the file.

MPEG2 is usually a DVD Rip, with a collection of .VOB files.

I've tried looking on the Panasonic website but they don't give any details at all about what specifics you need in order to get it to play back MPEG2.
Chilling_Silence (9)
1211156 2011-06-23 01:07:00 Convert it, easier.... pctek (84)
1211157 2011-06-23 01:32:00 I've given up on the MPEG2.
The other format listed is AVCHD.
Have just downloaded a converter & will try that.
Driftwood (5551)
1211158 2011-06-23 02:24:00 h.264 is *much* better! Better quality for the filesize.
Grab Handbrake and use it to convert. It's insanely easy and very standards-compliant with what it spits out for the better part ;)
Chilling_Silence (9)
1211159 2011-06-23 03:51:00 h264 (MPEG-4 Pt10) is better but it doesn't play everywhere. Xvid (MPEG-4 Pt2) pretty well does play everywhere.

I sent an Xvid file on a DVD to a friend who has a cheapest-of-the-cheap DVD player. I wrote on it "Not a DVD. Play in computer". Next time I saw him he said it played fine in his DVD player

The compatibility problem is why I routinely encode to Xvid 720 x 576. I keep the originals of course

I use XmediaRecode to convert. I like it because I can set the KeyFrameInterval to 25 frames (ie, every second)

This causes a 4% penalty in file size but it allows me to fast forward/rewind like a VCR - ie, able to see just about everything
BBCmicro (15761)
1211160 2011-06-23 05:05:00 True, but if your TV supports h.264, then you'd encode to h.264 and not XviD wouldn't you ... ;) Chilling_Silence (9)
1211161 2011-06-23 05:12:00 According to the manual it only supports MPEG2 & AVCHD.
I have been browsing the forums on this & the feeling is, MPEG2 only works if it has been created in a Panasonic camera.
There has been some sucess with the AVCHD format if MultiAVCHD is used for the conversion.
I have tryed this but it keeps shutting down partway through the process.
So I must be doing something wrong, which isn't hard these days.
Driftwood (5551)
1211162 2011-06-23 20:07:00 Try Handbrake, one of the output options is *bound* to work. Grab a short 20 second video and give it a whirl in a variety of profiles. Chilling_Silence (9)
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