AUDIO Video Interleave to VIDEO Object conversion is the process of transforming a video stored in the AVI container format into the VOB container format used on DVDs. This conversion remuxes or re-encodes the original streams so they conform to VOB/DVD standards (MPEG-2 video, AC-3/PCM audio and specific bitrate/packetization rules) for playback on DVD players and authoring tools.
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Read guide →Drag your .AVI file from your computer or use the browse function.
Confirm .vob as the selected destination format.
Click "Convert" and download your converted .VOB file once ready.
The MIME type for AVI files is video/x-msvideo, commonly encoded with codecs like DivX or XviD. VOB files have the MIME type video/dvd and typically contain MPEG-2 video streams along with AC3 or DTS audio. AVI files are versatile for various platforms, whereas VOB files are primarily used for DVD video content and compatible media players.
The VIDEO Object (.VOB) format is commonly used for video. Understanding its characteristics can be helpful when converting to or from other formats like AUDIO Video Interleave.
While specific technical details aren't available here, VIDEO Object files generally serve the purpose of storing video effectively within their domain.
Easily convert your AUDIO Video Interleave (AVI) files to VIDEO Object (VOB) format with our fast and reliable online converter. Perfect for users needing VOB files for DVD authoring or media playback compatibility, our tool supports hassle-free conversion without the need to install software.
AUDIO Video Interleave (AVI) is a widely used container format known for its flexibility and compatibility with multiple codecs. VIDEO Object (VOB) is specifically designed for DVD video discs, supporting multiplexed audio, video, and subtitles in a single file. While AVI is better suited for general video storage and playback, VOB excels in DVD authoring and standardized media delivery.
Keep source AVI resolution close to DVD standards (720x480 NTSC or 720x576 PAL) to avoid unnecessary scaling and quality loss.
Preserve audio quality by converting to AC-3 with an appropriate bitrate (192–384 kbps) or keeping PCM for highest fidelity when space allows.
For best video quality, use two-pass MPEG-2 encoding and target a bitrate between 4–9 Mbps depending on motion complexity.
Batch conversion is efficient for many files, but remember VOB/DVD rules split movies into 1 GB VOB segments; plan output naming and authoring accordingly.
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Video Editor
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Emma L.
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Limitations: VOB requires MPEG-2 video and specific audio formats, so codecs like H.264 or AAC in AVI will need re-encoding; DVD players may have strict resolution and bitrate caps.