I have to say, there isn't much out there tutorial-wise for people who are ripping subtitles for TV SERIES DVDs. I reripped two episodes and the subtitles are now showing up in VLC, but it's just about a second/fraction of a second off now. I looked at Subrip and I didn't reset the LastTime code setting after loading each VOB file, so it was adding time with each file I ripped, which explains the really wonky timing. This blog today will explain how VLC receives the SRT stream of.
Good catch! I was just thrilled that I finally got the subtitles to save for all the episodes - I didn't have any luck with CCExtractor or Subtitle Edit, so I wasn't looking at the time stamps. When you test the push-streaming effect of the SRT HD encoder, you can go for VLC software. I looked at all the subtitles I ripped, and every one has messed up times. These episodes are just 12 minutes or so long.
But dont worry if your movie file is not MKV because you can convert it to an MKV.
Open VLC > Media > convert > add your video > check Use. If the subtitles are not working in VLC at this stage, proceed to select Add subtitle file from the subtitle menu and select the downloaded file. So I am assuming that it is my subtitles, not VLC. You will need an MKV file of your movie for this merging process will work. First, make sure the files name for the video and the subtitles is exactly the same or it wont work.