Correct timeline of a .ts file












2














I have some MVs that is recorded from a TV, but timeline was incorrect somehow:



enter image description here



Anyone know some tool that can fix it ? The media plays fine, just the displayed stuff doesn't look good










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  • @Kiwy of course not, it's just am incorrect label
    – daisy
    Apr 3 '14 at 8:30


















2














I have some MVs that is recorded from a TV, but timeline was incorrect somehow:



enter image description here



Anyone know some tool that can fix it ? The media plays fine, just the displayed stuff doesn't look good










share|improve this question
















bumped to the homepage by Community 4 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.















  • @Kiwy of course not, it's just am incorrect label
    – daisy
    Apr 3 '14 at 8:30
















2












2








2







I have some MVs that is recorded from a TV, but timeline was incorrect somehow:



enter image description here



Anyone know some tool that can fix it ? The media plays fine, just the displayed stuff doesn't look good










share|improve this question















I have some MVs that is recorded from a TV, but timeline was incorrect somehow:



enter image description here



Anyone know some tool that can fix it ? The media plays fine, just the displayed stuff doesn't look good







timestamps media






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




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edited Aug 28 '12 at 10:52









Kevdog777

2,092123259




2,092123259










asked Aug 27 '12 at 15:48









daisydaisy

28.4k49168301




28.4k49168301





bumped to the homepage by Community 4 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.







bumped to the homepage by Community 4 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.














  • @Kiwy of course not, it's just am incorrect label
    – daisy
    Apr 3 '14 at 8:30




















  • @Kiwy of course not, it's just am incorrect label
    – daisy
    Apr 3 '14 at 8:30


















@Kiwy of course not, it's just am incorrect label
– daisy
Apr 3 '14 at 8:30






@Kiwy of course not, it's just am incorrect label
– daisy
Apr 3 '14 at 8:30












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















0














When I have problems with MPEG-TS files obtained by recording TV programmes, I usually try to demux them with Project X, and then mux them again with mplex from command (from the mjpegtools package).



I recommend you to avoid Project X GUI because I find it poorly designed, and to run it via command line, for example:



java -jar ProjectX.jar -demux input.ts


Then you can run mplex with a command similar to the following one, depending on the files you get with Project X:



mplex -f 8 -o output.mpeg input.m2v input.mp2


This way you will get a fixed MPEG-PS file from your original MPEG-TS file.



It seems Project X works only with standard definition MPEG files, not with high definition ones.



Hope this solves your problem.






share|improve this answer





























    0














    If you can live with mkv files instead, you can use tsMuxeR to demux the stream and then use mkvmerge from mkvtoolnix to create an mkv file bringing back all the demuxed files into a single mkv file. When creating the mkv file, some extra information is stored that might solve the problem for you.






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      2 Answers
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      2 Answers
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      active

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      0














      When I have problems with MPEG-TS files obtained by recording TV programmes, I usually try to demux them with Project X, and then mux them again with mplex from command (from the mjpegtools package).



      I recommend you to avoid Project X GUI because I find it poorly designed, and to run it via command line, for example:



      java -jar ProjectX.jar -demux input.ts


      Then you can run mplex with a command similar to the following one, depending on the files you get with Project X:



      mplex -f 8 -o output.mpeg input.m2v input.mp2


      This way you will get a fixed MPEG-PS file from your original MPEG-TS file.



      It seems Project X works only with standard definition MPEG files, not with high definition ones.



      Hope this solves your problem.






      share|improve this answer


























        0














        When I have problems with MPEG-TS files obtained by recording TV programmes, I usually try to demux them with Project X, and then mux them again with mplex from command (from the mjpegtools package).



        I recommend you to avoid Project X GUI because I find it poorly designed, and to run it via command line, for example:



        java -jar ProjectX.jar -demux input.ts


        Then you can run mplex with a command similar to the following one, depending on the files you get with Project X:



        mplex -f 8 -o output.mpeg input.m2v input.mp2


        This way you will get a fixed MPEG-PS file from your original MPEG-TS file.



        It seems Project X works only with standard definition MPEG files, not with high definition ones.



        Hope this solves your problem.






        share|improve this answer
























          0












          0








          0






          When I have problems with MPEG-TS files obtained by recording TV programmes, I usually try to demux them with Project X, and then mux them again with mplex from command (from the mjpegtools package).



          I recommend you to avoid Project X GUI because I find it poorly designed, and to run it via command line, for example:



          java -jar ProjectX.jar -demux input.ts


          Then you can run mplex with a command similar to the following one, depending on the files you get with Project X:



          mplex -f 8 -o output.mpeg input.m2v input.mp2


          This way you will get a fixed MPEG-PS file from your original MPEG-TS file.



          It seems Project X works only with standard definition MPEG files, not with high definition ones.



          Hope this solves your problem.






          share|improve this answer












          When I have problems with MPEG-TS files obtained by recording TV programmes, I usually try to demux them with Project X, and then mux them again with mplex from command (from the mjpegtools package).



          I recommend you to avoid Project X GUI because I find it poorly designed, and to run it via command line, for example:



          java -jar ProjectX.jar -demux input.ts


          Then you can run mplex with a command similar to the following one, depending on the files you get with Project X:



          mplex -f 8 -o output.mpeg input.m2v input.mp2


          This way you will get a fixed MPEG-PS file from your original MPEG-TS file.



          It seems Project X works only with standard definition MPEG files, not with high definition ones.



          Hope this solves your problem.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Aug 29 '12 at 9:34









          Francesco TurcoFrancesco Turco

          1,33331530




          1,33331530

























              0














              If you can live with mkv files instead, you can use tsMuxeR to demux the stream and then use mkvmerge from mkvtoolnix to create an mkv file bringing back all the demuxed files into a single mkv file. When creating the mkv file, some extra information is stored that might solve the problem for you.






              share|improve this answer


























                0














                If you can live with mkv files instead, you can use tsMuxeR to demux the stream and then use mkvmerge from mkvtoolnix to create an mkv file bringing back all the demuxed files into a single mkv file. When creating the mkv file, some extra information is stored that might solve the problem for you.






                share|improve this answer
























                  0












                  0








                  0






                  If you can live with mkv files instead, you can use tsMuxeR to demux the stream and then use mkvmerge from mkvtoolnix to create an mkv file bringing back all the demuxed files into a single mkv file. When creating the mkv file, some extra information is stored that might solve the problem for you.






                  share|improve this answer












                  If you can live with mkv files instead, you can use tsMuxeR to demux the stream and then use mkvmerge from mkvtoolnix to create an mkv file bringing back all the demuxed files into a single mkv file. When creating the mkv file, some extra information is stored that might solve the problem for you.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Jan 26 '13 at 12:39









                  SilverrockerSilverrocker

                  1,197920




                  1,197920






























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