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With my Vegas Movie Studio 9 software was included Sony dvd architect.Im trying to use Architect to burn a program built on Movie Studio.The program is 1 hour and 34 minutes long and when rendered to Mpeg1 is 1,336,485 KB.When rendered to Mpeg2 it is 4,313,686 KB.When I add the Mpeg2 render to Architect it warns that the file is 4.7GB - and too big to proceed. So I removed it from Architect and added the Mpeg1 render.When that Mpeg1 render is added to Architect, there is a warning that the file is 6GB!!!!Ive tried every option possible including custom combinations in an attempt to get a smaller file that Architect will accept.Can someone please explain:1 Why Architect might read the 1,336,485 KB file as '6GB'?2 Is there a way to get a much smaller file than the 4.7GB of the Mpeg2 render?I hope someone can shed some light on this please.kind regardsColinColin. 1 Why Architect might read the 1,336,485 KB file as '6GB'?Because MPEG-1 is not permissible on a DVD so DVD Architect is telling you that it must re-encode it as MPEG-2 and this is how big it will eventually be.2 Is there a way to get a much smaller file than the 4.7GB of the Mpeg2 render?Use a lower bit-rate. A standard DVD can hold about 1 hr 20 minutes of video at an average bit-rate of 6Mbps.
You are over that limit at 1 hr 34 minutes. Unfortunately, Movie Studio doesn't allow you to create custom templates to change the bit-rate.I believe that the 'Make Movie' button handles all of this for you and renders to AVI so that DVD Architect can optimize the video to fit in on the disc. Sorry I don't have Movie Studio (I use Vegas Pro) but this was my impression of what Make Movie does (i.e., take all the guess work out and simply make a DVD for you) Or you can manually render to a DV AVI file and use that in DVD Architect and it will fit it on the disc.jr.
Ive tried rendering to AVI - the only option it seems is 'Video for Windows(.AVI)' Is this what you would use? Because that gives me a file 22GB in size. Is there another AVI option I dont see?
That's the one. The 22GB AVI file will be converted to MPEG2 by DVD Architect and it will use the correct bit-rate so that it all fits on a DVD.If your video is 16:9 widescreen pick the PAL or NTSC DV Widescreen template and if your video is standard 4:3 then select the PAL or NTSC DV template.
You would choose PAL or NTSC based on what country you plan to view the video. US and Japan are NTSC, almost everywhere else in the world is PAL (except France which is SECAM but we won't go there);-)jr. Hello again Johnmy apologies for 'disappearing' last night. I thought later that I should have said Im heading to bed - sorry.Thank you again for persevering with this.Im in Brisbane Australia so use the PAL system.The PAL DV template is the 'Video for Windows (.AVI)' that I mentioned which has as its specifications:Audio: 48,000 Hz, 16 Bit, Stereo, PCM Uncompressed.Video: 25 fps, 720x576, Lower field first.Pixel Aspect Ratio: 1.093. OpenDML compatible.PAL DV video files compatible with Sony Video Capture.and gives me a 22GB render.:-(is this a limitation of Movie Studio I wonder?regardsColinColin. Hello Johnthanks again for your support.In the end Architect DID compress the file as you said.I was attempting to put two titles on that disk but together they were 5.2GB (too big) so I settled for one and it worked just as you said. An awesome relief.:-)Now.
Onto the next project.it never rains but pours.Im importing a 640mb AVI to Vegas Movie Studio Platinum 9.Everything was fine until I tidied up a few squillion files that Id inadvertently made on the previous project you just helped me with.In tidying up I may have thrown something out because (even tho it wasnt this project) I can only import and see the Audio component on the time line. No video.Ive checked the AVI file - it still has both audio and vision components, and Ive reinstalled Movie Studio in case Id deleted a codec in error but still no good - and no video component.any suggestions please?kind regardscolinColin. I have been having almost identical problems with Architect and am beginning to wonder why anybody uses it since it has so many issues with recognizing file size and so on.I am using Sony Vegas Pro 10, rendered to Main Concept MPG-2 twice now for the same project. The first time I ended up with a 10 GB render, which took literally 34 hours to process. The video is about 3 hours, so the quality would have been s.t anyway, most likely. On to my next attempt, dividing it up into 2 parts.
This time, Part One will be almost two hours and the last hour on Part Two. 16 hours of rendering gave me a file that is 4.3 GB in size. Add in a.few. menu buttons. Now, of course, DVD Architect is telling me the mpg file is 6 GB. I took John's advice and ignored the warning, tried to burn it as it is, and it won`t work.I've been messing around with Vegas for only a few months now and like the workflow, but I will confess - I either didn`t see, or chose to ignore the Architect templates.
Possibly because I wanted to tweak the audio settings (I am more of an audio engineer than a video person, just making videos as a favor and for research work). Do I really need to use one of those templates in order to get this burned to a DVD?I am running Win7 64-bit with a fast processor and 8 GB of RAM, really wish the rendering wasn`t so painfully slow. (Pinnacle was worse on this system, I could barely edit in the first place.). Chris Estrada 'I either didn`t see, or chose to ignore the Architect templates. Do I really need to use one of those templates in order to get this burned to a DVD? 'That's what the templates are there for.
If you want your video and audio to be DVD compliant, you should use the templates. Only adjust the average bit-rate lower to fit your video length if it's over 90 minutes.Chris Estrada 'I am running Win7 64-bit with a fast processor and 8 GB of RAM, really wish the rendering wasn`t so painfully slow.' What do you consider 'a fast processor'? My MPEG2 renders to the DVD templates from HDV source with color correction, audio compression, etc.
Takes about 2x. So a one hour performance is rendered in about 2 hrs.
This is with my old 2.66Ghz Core 2 Quad.jr. Thus far, the videos I have made for people have all been over 90 minutes. And for the most part pretty amateur, during my ethnographic research, and very much amateur except for the sound which I record much more professionally using external microphones, so I didn't worry too much about crunching 2 hours onto a DVD. I was able to successfully do this in Vegas and Architect on two occasions, as well as one other video that was only 1 hour in length, using customized settings in the NTSC Main Concept MPG-2 settings as a starting point.I appreciate your response on this.
But can you tell me why Architect can`t simply recognize the 4 GB file as a 4GB file and instead tells me that its 6 GB? Seeing as it is mpg2 and not AVI or some other format, it should be able to handle this, if I've been understanding anything so far.This has been trial-by-fire learning with video for me and I`ve only been doing it because I've been asked to by people who I've collaborated with in ethnographic research for two years. Honestly I would much rather have just kept on with audio field recordings! But I have begun to enjoy this, when it works out okay it ends up being worth it.The processor is a AMD Athlon II X2 250 3Ghz. I do not use any color correction and audio compression is (ideally) done by me beforehand although in this case I was using master files from a CD at 16-bit/44.1khz. That still shouldn't account for 16 hours to process 90 minutes though.oh I forgot to mention, on this last rendering run I used the AWESOME bitrate calculator that you linked to (in this post? Or another?) in order to figure out what bitdepth should be my 'target' to fit my 2 hours on this DVD, then I lowered it even further to give it some headroom.
And, alas, the file is barely over 4 GB but Architect sees it as 6GB. Sorry to keep harping on this but I am to the point of just thinking about burning this one off in Nero. Chris Estrada ' But can you tell me why Architect can`t simply recognize the 4 GB file as a 4GB file and instead tells me that its 6 GB?'
Ghost in the machine? No one can tell you why DVD Architect continues to have issues with calculating space. I have always used the DVD Architect templates and I've always ignored DVD Architect's warning when I know the file is small enough to fit and it has always fit. Only Sony can tell you why this isn't working for you. Alternately you could render as AVI and let DVD Architect convert the file to MPEG2 itself.
That's gotta work.Chris Estrada 'The processor is a AMD Athlon II X2 250 3Ghz'That's only a dual core. While it may be fast, it's probably the reason why renders are taking so long. A quad core would be faster and a hex core would be much faster.
So if my quad core is taking 2 hrs for a 1 hr video, your dual core will probably take 4 hrs for the same video. I'm not sure why you're seeing 34 hr renders. You must have a lot of tracks and composting or are using some FX that is CPU intensive. It also could be due to a mistake like you've nudged the opacity slider on the track header from 100% to 99% and Vegas is processing every frame with opacity when it doesn't need to.jr.
Thanks again John, you really seem like `the man` at these forums. And if you've written any kind of `best practices` FAQ or Wiki type page, I will read every word of it.This video has 6 tracks comprised of:#1 - Text overlays for titles (names of singers who appear in the video, some credits at the end. In total around 10 `text events` or less)#2 - about four minutes of video from a handy-cam Kodak 'HD' recorder that i spliced in3# Photo overlays for when I have gaps in my video footage or the footage was too awful or shaky to use.
Once more, only a few of these `events` in the timeline4. Main video track5. Audio track from camera, muted for probably 80% of the video and used almost entirely just for synching purposes with #66. Stereo audio track mixed down from multitrack audio in Steinberg Cubase 5.The only thing different about this session from previous sessions that I can think of is that in the past (at least once or twice) I did my upsampling to 48 khz (video sampling rate) OUTSIDE of Vegas. And instead of PCM 16-bit wav, I probably converted to 320 mp3 for at least one of those projects, and set the values accordingly in Vegas so that no recompression would occur.Even so, audio compression from WAV and upsampling from 44.1 to 48 should NOT account for such a huge time lag.
I am currently 8 hours in, with 7 hours to go, for a 90 minute video. Obviously since rendering nearly maxes out CPU, I am doing nothing else serious with the computer while it is rendering aside from sending you this message and taking care of business related things with Skype. When that is over I close everything in Taskmanager including explorer.exe and just leave Vegas to process.I admit to knowing nothing about composting and left the two tracks containing video in `compost alpha` mode. As previously mentioned there is only about 3 or 4 minutes in the timeline where there is video present on more than one track.So if Architect is such a pain, why do you (or anyone) use it other than it interfaces well (or, well enough) with Vegas or Movie Studio? Is there any other authoring software you use? I began exploring other applications just to burn off a quick smaple copy to show to my main `informant` in this project (I doing anthropological fieldwork. These people are 'non-professional' musicians, so to speak, who perform for the sheer love it and make their living doing other things.
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I've been making excuses since Friday on why I don't have a video to show him and my technical reasons don't mean much to someone not acquainted with the issues at hand, and are even weaker since I only halfway know what I am talking about to begin with.).Nero software is still just as bad as I remember it being so I wrote off that option after about 10 minutes of futzing with the latest version of `Vision.` DVD Lab Pro seems like a handy (and small) little authoring application that has most of the features of semi-pro or possibly even pro-editing software. If I had set my rendering in Vegas to use closed GOPs, DVD Lab would wave recognized the chapter points and everything and burned off a copy pretty painlessly (I believe). I wish I had just done that now - I only had about 4 chapter markers in this 90 minutes of video anyway and it would have taken all of five minutes to locate them and remark them. Hi John, my new guru. You probably haven't slogged through my first long post and here I am writing another.First, I have been thinking about selling this computer since I will be moving back from Brazil to the US.
It served me well for a couple years while doing fieldwork but a quad-core sure seems to be what Vegas wants. I had done a semi-customized build with a shop that semi-customizes computers and told them I wanted good hardware for video editing. And I learned to never trust salesmen and always do your own research. Sort of knew that already but I was in a situation where I had to make a decision fast, with limited time to bring back a new machine from the US to my field site. If only I had known about this wonderful forum first. When I get to where I am going to build something new I am sure I will be coming here a lot for tips.That being said, I am now rendering the 2nd part of the DVD (Volume 2!) and it seems to be moving much faster. One thing just occurred to me about why that might be.While rendering the 'first volume', I selected the portion to be rendering and when doing that final step checked the box 'only render looped portion'.
I had begun to delete the portions I didn't want rendered (after saving the project, obviously) but for a few reasons decided to go with rendering only the selected portion. At least one of those reasons is an ever-present fear of accidentally messing up my synchronization by deleting something with ripple turned on and other such foibles.Well, for rendering the second have, the deleting events on the timeline UP TO where I wanted the rendering to begin seemed a lot 'cleaner' visually than the other way around, and easier to make sure I didn't accidentally jostle anything out of synch.SO FAR, the processing is chugging along much much faster, and the video is only about 10 minutes shorter than the first.One.other. option that I wanted to ask you about. I searched the forums but so many different threads came up it made my head spin. What is the ideal video buffer cache size to use? The Architect rendering template has a default of something like 33 KB which makes me thing I don't understand what they really mean by buffer as that seems absurdly small. Hoping I wasn't going to wreck the rendering I went all crazy and increased that number to 500, still less than a megabyte.
Hello again,Ive been going quite fine lately with DVD Architect until recently.Im trying to burn 4 titles on a DVD.The disk is 'Preparing' OK but when I try to 'Burn' I hear the disk spinning but the burn stops at 66%. I have to cancel the operation as it sits on 66% and wont progress.Ive used 8 DVD disks so far and its the same result each time.Initially I thought it might be because the program material was longer in duration than the disk could hold (in the popup bar at bottom of screen I had a RED signal for 'Disc Space Used: 4.7GB'.I edit the program material to make is shorter in duration and now I see a YELLOW signal with 'Disc Space Used: 3.9GB'.I figure THIS should now be working - shouldnt it?Any help you can offer will be greatly appreciated.regardsColin. Exasperated I gave up on Architect several months ago but tonight braved it again.Unfortunately nothing has changed and the program pauses without completing its burn process.Here isthe current situation:Im trying to burn 5 short programs totalling 1.3gb to DVD.The 'prepare' process completes ok and the 'burn' process commences and gets to '66%' and pauses.Now its cancelling and taking an extraordinarily long time to clear.I cant go back to describe in detail the process but I do recall the log saying that the video 'would be compressed'.
I wondered why it would do that when the content was only 1.3GB and would easily fit on a 4.7GB DVD. I wonder if that is a clue to the problem Im experiencing.Any suggestions will be greatfully received.Colin. Colin Oddy 'I have the render setting as: Video for Windows (.avi) PAL DV. Is this what youd call a 'DVD Architect template' and recommend?' DVD's can only play MPEG2 files so AVI files will always have to be re-rendered.If you want to render a DVD compliant file from Vegas, use the Main Concept MPEG2 render type with the DVD Architect PAL video stream template.
Then render your audio separately as Dolby Digital AC-3. If you name the files with the same name (and just different extensions) DVD Architect will know that the.ac3 file goes with the.mpg file.jr.