I've had this problem with every DVD I've tried to make with iDVD 6. The last DVD I made was 2.8 GB in size as reported in the Project Info. I encoded it into a disk image and the final size is 4.1 GB. Luckily I'll still be able to burn it to a disk. The problem arises if I try to make a DVD any longer than 3 GB. The encoded size is bigger than a DVD can hold. If I burn directly to a DVD instead of making a disk image, it will finish the encoding, then when it gets to the burning stage it will give me an error saying that there is not enough room on the DVD to burn. My settings are set to Best Quality single-layer DVD. I've had this happen on two different computers.
On a related note, the capacity bar on Project Info is either green, yellow, or red. Obviously when it's red, that means that it's over capacity. However, the bar is yellow from about 3 GB to 4.2 GB. What does yellow mean? If I ever encode a movie while in the yellow capacity region, the final size is greater than a 4.7 GB DVD. As long as I stay in the green region (<3GB), I'll be fine. Any ideas?
The last DVD I made was 2.8 GB in size as reported in the Project Info. I encoded it into a disk image and the final size is 4.1 GB. Luckily I'll still be able to burn it to a disk. The problem arises if I try to make a DVD any longer than 3 GB. The encoded size is bigger than a DVD can hold.
It sounds like you aren't using DV video, but something more highly compressed. What type of video content are you using?
The one project I'm working on is 101 minutes long and takes 3.2 GB. When encoded as a disk image, it takes 4.1 GB. There's 1 menu, 2 tracks, 33 seconds of motion menus. Settings are at NTSC, standard aspect ratio, Best Quality, single-layer.
The size information shown in the Project info screen is only approximate based on 'average content' - it really has no way of knowing the final mpg-2 compressed size of your content until has has actually compressed it. If you had a video of a 'black cat in a coal room', the content would 'squeeze' quite a lot. If you have lots of detail, a lot of panning, electronic noise 'grain' from low light shooting, etc. - these lead to the content being able to be less 'squeezed'.
In adition, iDVD uses uncompressed PCM audio while Toast and Apple's DVDSP let you use compressed audio. This takes up more disc space with iDVD.
An approach you could take is to create a disk image file out of iDVD and then use Roxio's Toast Titanium's compress to fit option to actually write to a DVD disc.
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Problems with DVD capacity
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