![]() I didn't think AVI even supported AAC audio? Generally I'd load all the audio into foobar2000 and convert it to MP3 once MKVCleaver had extracted it all. ![]() ![]() The problem is adding that audio to the AVI. It'll also extract the audio from each MKV as a single stream. It's not exactly a speedy process, although it has a batch mode. because it's doubtful the DVD player will play the AVIs you're trying to create by copying the video, but just for additional information I thought I'd point out MKVCleaver has an option to remux the video it extracts from MKV files as AVI. Not to take anything away from what poisondeathray said. The bloody thing is almost there, save for the syncing issue, it'll be a shame to have to settle with re-encoding my mkv files!! Apologies for the very long post, it's my first Unfortunately, Avidemux seems the most capable software for what I want: MKV to AVI conversion without necessarily recoding, to preserve quality. Please can someone help me? I've scoured these forums and have found intermittently that users have faced similar audio sync problems with Avidemux, which have never been solved. The instinct would be to check "Shift" for a 329ms delay, right? Well, as I said,no matter how many times I checked "Shift", there was no change. But interestingly, before my final 4 tries with Avidemux conversions, I clicked on Information and saw the duration for audio was 01:34:46.468 and video was shorter, at 01:34:46:139. When I played all of them on VLC, and used Track Synchronization to "correct" the delay, it seems the audio was delayed by 600ms from start to finish. Essentially the end-product avi file is always the same, audio-delayed mess. That was after I checked the "Shift" tickbox in Audio. In the last 24 hours I have tried using every codec in the Video Output ( HuffYUV, FLV1, etc) and Audio Output (Faac, lav, etc) to see if that'll change things, to no avail. Writing library : libebml v1.2.0 + libmatroska v1.1.0 Writing application : mkvmerge v4.8.0 ('I Got The.') built on 03:12:58 While the output avi file's video quality was exactly the same as the original mkv (half the battle won), the audio was too fast, which points to an a/v sync issue I think. To see if the end-product is up to scratch I tried it (version 2.6.1) on a file. ![]() Many users here and elsewhere recommended Avidemux, so I gave it a go. Hi, I have been searching all over for a program that "converts" (not in the recoding sense) an mkv file to an avi file.
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