How to Use 3herosoft DivX to DVD Burner: A Step-by-Step Guide
Converting DivX files to a playable DVD lets you watch encoded videos on standard DVD players. This guide walks you through the process using 3herosoft DivX to DVD Burner, from preparation to burning a disc.
What you’ll need
- A Windows PC with enough free disk space (video files can be large).
- 3herosoft DivX to DVD Burner installed (assume latest compatible version).
- Source DivX files (.divx, .avi, .xvid).
- A blank DVD‑R or DVD‑RW (use DVD‑R for best compatibility).
- A DVD burner drive.
Step 1 — Prepare source files
- Collect videos: Put all DivX files you want on the DVD into a single folder for convenience.
- Check duration: Total video time should stay within DVD capacity (single‑layer ≈ 120 minutes at standard DVD quality; dual‑layer ≈ 240 minutes). If over capacity, plan to compress, split across discs, or shorten content.
Step 2 — Launch the program and create a new project
- Open 3herosoft DivX to DVD Burner.
- Choose “New Project” or the equivalent option to start a DVD project.
Step 3 — Add source DivX files
- Click Add File(s) or drag & drop your DivX files into the program.
- Arrange file order by selecting a file and using the Up/Down controls; the order determines DVD menu playback sequence.
- Preview each file with the built‑in player to confirm correct content and aspect ratio.
Step 4 — Edit and trim (optional)
- Select a video and choose Edit if you need to trim start/end, crop black bars, or adjust brightness/contrast.
- Use the Split tool to create chapters or remove unwanted segments.
- Confirm edits by previewing the trimmed result.
Step 5 — Configure DVD settings
- Output format: Choose DVD NTSC (for North America/Japan) or PAL (for Europe/most other regions) depending on your player/TV.
- Video Quality: Choose between higher quality (larger file size) and faster burning (more compression). If total time is close to capacity, select a higher compression level.
- Aspect Ratio: Select 4:3 or 16:9 to match your source video and target display.
- Disc type: Choose DVD‑5 (single layer) or DVD‑9 (dual layer) if the software supports it.
Step 6 — Create a DVD menu (optional but recommended)
- Open the Menu tab.
- Pick a template and customize: background image, title text, button styles, and chapter thumbnails.
- Set the auto‑play or loop options if desired.
- Preview the menu flow to ensure correct navigation.
Step 7 — Set burn options
- Insert a blank DVD into the burner.
- In Burn or Build settings, select the DVD burner drive as the target.
- Choose whether to create an ISO file first (recommended if you want a backup) or burn directly to disc.
- Set burn speed—select a moderate speed (e.g., 4x or 8x) to reduce risk of write errors.
- Enable finalization so the disc is playable on most standalone players.
Step 8 — Start conversion and burning
- Click Start, Build, or Burn to begin. The program will transcode DivX to MPEG‑2 (DVD format), author the DVD, and burn it.
- Monitor progress; encoding time depends on file size, PC speed, and chosen quality.
- If you created an ISO, you may need to burn it afterward using the program or a separate burner utility.
Step 9 — Verify the disc
- After burning completes, eject and reinsert the DVD or test it in a standalone player.
- Check menu navigation, playback quality, and chapter points.
- If issues appear (audio sync, poor quality), adjust settings (bitrate, aspect ratio, encoding profile) and reburn.
Troubleshooting — Common issues
- Disc not recognized: Ensure disc type (DVD‑R vs DVD‑RW) is supported by your player and that finalization was enabled.
- Poor video quality: Reduce number of videos per disc, choose lower compression, or increase DVD bitrate.
- Audio out of sync: Try re‑encoding the source with a different audio codec/bitrate or use the program’s audio offset setting.
- Burn errors: Lower burn speed, clean the disc drive lens, or try a different brand of blank discs.
Tips for best results
- Use original, highest‑quality source files to minimize re‑encoding artifacts.
- Keep total runtime comfortably under disc capacity to preserve quality.
- Prefer DVD‑R for better compatibility with older players.
- Create an ISO as a backup before burning multiple copies.
This procedure will convert and burn your DivX videos into a standard DVD playable on most DVD players. If you want, tell me how long your videos are and I can recommend specific bitrate and quality settings.
Leave a Reply