Postby RpD » 20 Dec 2012 18:07
This is an old thread, but I thought I'd post what worked for me....
First, for some reason, I had to save my 'converted' file to a more 'public' accessible folder... VLC would not save anything to the 'normal' folder/location which I chose at first... so I used C:\Temp folder. Message verbosity did nothing for me... no errors, no warnings, nada.
Start VLC.
Click Media, Convert/Save
Click Add, find/select your source audio/video file.
Click 'Show more options'
In the 'Edit Options' (it may already say :file-caching=300), add a space and your effect, such as :rate=1.25
...for example... :file-caching=300 :rate=1.25
If you see the button labelled "Convert/Save", click it...
...otherwise, click the little down arrow to the right of the button, then click 'Convert'.
Click 'Browse'', and browse to your destination folder...
...then type a filename-and-extension in the File name: input box
...(note the available file extensions displayed below the input box)
...for example... myfile.mp4
Click the 'Save' button.
Click the 'Start' button. (If you have other program window(s) open, the original VLC window may become hidden behind it... go to your 'taskbar' at bottom of Desktop, and click the VLC icon.)
In the VLC window, the progress bar will display activity... until it gets to the right-side end, then the activity will vanish, with nothing more shown... the VLC window reverts to previous inactive state.
Go to your destination folder, and hopefully you will find your 'converted' file.
I've found that slowing a file down didn't work so well for me... sound drops out; speeding it up works better, but can get 'quirks' (artifacts, corruptions, whatever) if you set rate too high. I presume there are other 'options' that may improve output... I just wanted to speed an audio/video up a little. It worked, and saved my new file.