Bob Self wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 05, 2006 at 10:35:42AM -0700, Phil Ehrens wrote:
> > Bob Self wrote:
> > > On the computer (LCD screen) the picture
> > > looks too bright and muddy or "washed out". I've been trying to find a 
> > > way to
> > > get the bright colors back and more contrast using some filter in 
> > > transcode but
> > > so far I haven't been able to find anything that works well. I tried
> > > '-J al 1' and that may have helped a little.
> > 
> > First try '-G 0.8', and if that doesn't get you what you want, try
> > 
> >  -x mplayer="-vf eq2=0.9:1.1:-0.1:1.1"
> > 
> > And see the mplayer docs for the eq2 filter. 
> > 
> 
> I tried the '-G 0.8' and didn't notice any difference. I then tried the eq2 
> suggestion
> but got a lot of warnings or errors about "audio block/sample failure..."
> 
> Here's what I tried:
> 
> transcode -i z001.dv -w 1400,250,100 -I 1 -R 1 -x mplayer="-vf 
> eq2=0.9:1.1:-0.1:1.1" ,raw -y xvid,null -o /dev/null
> transcode -i z001.dv -w 1400,250,100 -I 1 -R 2 -x mplayer="-vf 
> eq2=0.9:1.1:-0.1:1.1",raw -y xvid,null -o 7.avi
> 
> What I had previously used with no errors was
> 
> transcode -i z001.dv -w 1400,250,100 -I 1 -R 1 -x dv,raw -y xvid,null -o 
> /dev/null
> transcode -i z001.dv -w 1400,250,100 -I 1 -R 2 -x dv,raw -y xvid,null -o 7.avi
> 
> 
> Do you know what is wrong with the eq2 syntax?

Just guessing, but since the problem seems to be a sync issue,
maybe let mplayer handle the audio as well. Change raw to mplayer.

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