Sony Vegas Rendering Question
- n3ko-chan
- Joined: Fri Sep 30, 2005 12:12 am
Sony Vegas Rendering Question
I suppose they would be called glitches anyways; I've got a slight problem, whenever I render an AMV in Sony Vegas, it will have quick flashy glitches/frames that appear for just a quick moment and these are not in the time line at all.
Is there any way to fix this? And just to clarify, my clips are not DivX/Xvid before that even gets sprung on me, they're compressed with Lagarith Lossless Codec.
Also: When I import video clips into Vegas I also get the audio timeline for that clip, however in tutorials I've seen them be imported with only the video. Is there anyway to adjust this so as to not have the audio timeline?
Is there any way to fix this? And just to clarify, my clips are not DivX/Xvid before that even gets sprung on me, they're compressed with Lagarith Lossless Codec.
Also: When I import video clips into Vegas I also get the audio timeline for that clip, however in tutorials I've seen them be imported with only the video. Is there anyway to adjust this so as to not have the audio timeline?
- LivingFlame
- Joined: Sat May 28, 2005 4:41 pm
- Location: Closer than you think...
It's kinda hard to say what the glitches are, exactly; do these glitches appear at cuts, by any chance?
And to import the video without audio, you would have to turn off the audio when you export the Lagarith files out of Vdub. There are at least two ways to do that. 1) Go into the streams menu in Vdub and turn the audio off there. 2) Add the line "KillAudio()" to your AviSynth script (without the quotes, obviously; I'm sure you'd get that on your own, but better safe than sorry).
To get rid of the audio after it's been imported into Vegas, click on the clip in the timeline, press "U" to unlink the audio and video, and then delete the audio out of the timeline.
And to import the video without audio, you would have to turn off the audio when you export the Lagarith files out of Vdub. There are at least two ways to do that. 1) Go into the streams menu in Vdub and turn the audio off there. 2) Add the line "KillAudio()" to your AviSynth script (without the quotes, obviously; I'm sure you'd get that on your own, but better safe than sorry).
To get rid of the audio after it's been imported into Vegas, click on the clip in the timeline, press "U" to unlink the audio and video, and then delete the audio out of the timeline.
... yea ...
- n3ko-chan
- Joined: Fri Sep 30, 2005 12:12 am
Thanks! For the glitches, they're all between two different clips in the AMV, to show you, I uploaded an AMV onto YouTube with several of them http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dzAdP3SEK54, They occur at :28, :31, 1:06, 1:24, and 1:41, though on YouTube they're less noticeable so I'm not sure if you'll be able to see them clearly or not.
- JaddziaDax
- Crazy Cat Lady!
- Joined: Tue Mar 16, 2004 6:25 am
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- JaddziaDax
- Crazy Cat Lady!
- Joined: Tue Mar 16, 2004 6:25 am
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- n3ko-chan
- Joined: Fri Sep 30, 2005 12:12 am
- JaddziaDax
- Crazy Cat Lady!
- Joined: Tue Mar 16, 2004 6:25 am
- Status: I has a TRU Arceus
- Location: somewhere i think O.o
- Contact:
- JaddziaDax
- Crazy Cat Lady!
- Joined: Tue Mar 16, 2004 6:25 am
- Status: I has a TRU Arceus
- Location: somewhere i think O.o
- Contact: