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You'll be surprised how easy this is. First, rename your *.m2p file to *.mp2. Then demultiplex it into a *.mpv video file and a *.mpa audio file. Then use the multiplex option to put the audio and video back together in SVCD format, but you'll notice there is an option for "audio offset" or something like that. If the sound appears after the video, you need a negative value. If the sound appears before the video, you need a positive value. Basically you just have to guess how much to offset, multiplex the files, and check to see if they are in sync. Repeat the process if they are not in sync. Start with a small value like .100 and work from there.
Jason you're a star thanks for the reply.I will try this later.
I have just managed to extract audio with Virtual Dub as a wave file from the original avi.When played "media player"
Wave is 49:46 & m2p file"video" is 49:53
only a small difference overall but my tv show has audio out of sync by more i think.It is Robbie williams singing on Danish tv with commentry in danish so hard to pick where audio is wrong.I'll have a go with Womble with your help
If your Audio and Video are different Lengths then Womble will not help your Sync Problem especially since the length is off by at least 7 seconds, you have to use an audio editor to Change the length of the Audio to the Length of the Video then re-mux the two together and them hopefully they will be in sync..
I've seen this procoder audio problem a lot. demux your video and remux with a negative 220 setting on audio synch. That may be it exactly or at least be a good starting place.
I tried womble,but you were correct the audio is too far out of sync.I tried virtual dub demux audio to .wav then mux with TMPC,got the same result.I'll try the audio editor next.Could you give me a bit more info on the easiest to use & a few pointers on what to do?
I've never had Procoder create that bad a synch issue.
The new version, 1.25 seems to have fixed most synch issues, although I still see a bit when encoding MPEG2 to MPEG1. Even that is better though, so they're plainly tightening their code.