How to Use iWisoft Flash/SWF to Video Converter: Step-by-Step Guide
1. Install and launch
- Download and install iWisoft Flash/SWF to Video Converter from a trusted source.
- Open the program after installation.
2. Add SWF/Flash files
- Click Add or Add Files.
- Select one or multiple .swf files from your drive (supports batch import).
3. Choose output format
- Open the Profile or Output Format dropdown.
- Select target format (e.g., MP4, AVI, WMV, MOV). For wide compatibility choose MP4 (H.264).
4. Set output folder
- Click Browse or Output Folder.
- Choose where converted videos will be saved.
5. Configure video/audio settings (optional)
- Click Settings or Advanced to adjust:
- Resolution (match source or choose 720p/1080p)
- Frame rate (usually 24–30 fps)
- Video bitrate (higher = better quality; 1,500–4,000 kbps for 720p)
- Audio codec/bitrate (e.g., AAC, 128–256 kbps)
- For multiple files, apply settings to all if available.
6. Cropping, trimming, or watermark (optional)
- Use built-in Edit or Trim features to cut unwanted parts.
- Use Crop to remove black bars or adjust aspect ratio.
- Add Watermark or overlay text if needed.
7. Preview
- Use the program’s Preview pane to check playback and edits before conversion.
8. Start conversion
- Click Convert, Start, or Start Convert.
- Monitor progress; batch jobs show per-file progress.
9. Verify output
- When finished, open the output folder and play the converted file to confirm audio/video sync and quality.
10. Troubleshooting tips
- If conversion fails or shows blank video: ensure the SWF uses supported rendering (some SWFs use ActionScript or streaming requiring a SWF player). Try a different output codec or enable GPU acceleration if available.
- If audio is missing: check the audio codec setting and increase audio bitrate.
- Corrupted SWF: try re-exporting the SWF from the source or use a SWF decompiler to extract assets.
Quick recommended settings (general use)
- Format: MP4 (H.264)
- Resolution: same as source or 1280×720
- Frame rate: 30 fps
- Video bitrate: 2000–3500 kbps
- Audio: AAC, 128 kbps, 44.1 kHz
If you want, I can produce concise on-screen step labels for a quick reference or convert recommended settings into presets.
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