Open MuxMan and slect your m2v file as the video stream source file. When the process finishes, close PGCDemux.
This will not take long, as you are not actually demuxing the DVD, just generating the CellTimes.txt file. Select DEMUX as the output directory.Ĭlick "Process". Open PGCDemux, and select as your Input IFO the VTS_01_0.ifo in the INITIAL folder. Create a new folder inside FINAL called VIDEO_TS. Create an m2v file for your video stream using your encoder of choice.Īuthor your DVD as normal in DVD Architect, and prepare the files to a destination folder called INITIAL.Ĭreate three additional folders, named DEMUX, REMUX and FINAL. This guide explains a method for working around this limitation, and is derived from advice and guidance kindly offered by Captain Khajiit.Įxport your project's audio streams as valid AC3 files, whether stereo or 5.1 surround sound. I'll take some screenshots at the weekend and format it a bit more neatly, but the general gist of things should hopefully be clear from this:Ĭreating a DVD with multiple audio tracks using DVD Architect StudioĭVD Architect Studio is a great authoring tool, but one of its limitations is that it does not allow multiple audio streams. OK, a bit later than I'd hoped but here's my write-up of the process. I'll write up the process in a bit more detail tomorrow.
#DVD ARCHITECT 5 MP4 FREE#
This means I can do all the layout and design work in Architect (including things like setting intro sequences, animated chapter selection screens etc, which is great as many of these functions are not available in free authoring programs), then use the PGCDemux/MuxMan/VOBBlanker approach to replace the video file used and add in the commentary track as a secondary audio stream. Having said that I've also verified that the approach I mentioned in my earlier post is successful.
#DVD ARCHITECT 5 MP4 SOFTWARE#
Still, I can't complain - as a free piece of software it's surprisingly good and I have used it previously to author DVDs and its output has always been satisfactory. At a guess, I'd speculate that DVD Styler just isn't optimised for working with large files and occasionally runs into caching, buffering or memory management issues. The source files are fine - I revisited them in DVD Architect and they all work seamlessly, and I've been able to mux them with Muxman as well.