Hi
Have just installed trial version of VS 10 and it captured fine and has rendered ok with transisions and also music and titles with half a dozen 1 min. clips... it plays back great as a dv avi but when I create disk and either create dvd folders or burn it to dvd it then plays with a jerk as the clips pan from left to right... not a random jerk more of a regular stutter if you can imagine it... it's a bit like me moving the camera as I pan and stopping it every half second and then continuing to move it... has any body else experienced it? other than that I haven't got the streaking thank goodness from Magix movie edit pro 10 plus I've just purchased and I think I need to put it on ebay now as this seems much easier to use if only I could sort this jerking out....
thanks
Kind regards
Jack[/url]
VS 10 - Just installed trial, novice, problem please help...
Moderator: Ken Berry
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For many people, it seems that their burning problems are associated with the work flow they adopt, and for these people, it appears that they may not be following optimum practice. The main problem seems to be that they have their project in the timeline, do their edits, and then attempt to burn their project directly to disc. And it sounds as though this is what you may have done.
The recommended procedure is set out in the first sticky post on this Board. But briefly, with each project, you should first be going from the edited project (i.e. your DV/AVI files) to Share > Create Video File > DVD, and producing a DVD-compatible mpeg-2 file. If your original captures were from a digital souce, which it sounds as though they were, then you would normally use Lower Field First. I am not asbolutely sure about your description of your problem, but one possibility is that you have the wrong Field Order set. Normally, files captured from a digital source are Lower Field First, and those captured from an analogue source are Upper Field First (this is true for about 90% of capture devices). So check which Field Order you have used in your final burning.
You will also need to work out the compression rate you use from the amount of video you want to fit on disc. (Roughly, a compression rate of 8000 kbps will give you around an hour on a single layer DVD; 6000 kbps -- 1.5 hours; 4000 kbps -- 2 hours).
Then when you have all of the final mpeg-2s you want, you close your last project, and open Share > Create Disc > DVD. Instead of inserting projects in the burning module, you then insert the DVD-compliant mpeg-2s you have produced, build your menus etc and then burn. Make sure you click 'do not convert compliant mpeg files' in the cogwheel icon to the bottom left of the burning screen.
In other words, there are two steps after editing: first produce a DVD compliant mpeg, and only then do you burn the disc. You are, of course, free to follow any work flow you want, and for some, the truncated method of burning a disc direct from a project works. But the broad experience on this Board supports the work flow I have described above.
The recommended procedure is set out in the first sticky post on this Board. But briefly, with each project, you should first be going from the edited project (i.e. your DV/AVI files) to Share > Create Video File > DVD, and producing a DVD-compatible mpeg-2 file. If your original captures were from a digital souce, which it sounds as though they were, then you would normally use Lower Field First. I am not asbolutely sure about your description of your problem, but one possibility is that you have the wrong Field Order set. Normally, files captured from a digital source are Lower Field First, and those captured from an analogue source are Upper Field First (this is true for about 90% of capture devices). So check which Field Order you have used in your final burning.
You will also need to work out the compression rate you use from the amount of video you want to fit on disc. (Roughly, a compression rate of 8000 kbps will give you around an hour on a single layer DVD; 6000 kbps -- 1.5 hours; 4000 kbps -- 2 hours).
Then when you have all of the final mpeg-2s you want, you close your last project, and open Share > Create Disc > DVD. Instead of inserting projects in the burning module, you then insert the DVD-compliant mpeg-2s you have produced, build your menus etc and then burn. Make sure you click 'do not convert compliant mpeg files' in the cogwheel icon to the bottom left of the burning screen.
In other words, there are two steps after editing: first produce a DVD compliant mpeg, and only then do you burn the disc. You are, of course, free to follow any work flow you want, and for some, the truncated method of burning a disc direct from a project works. But the broad experience on this Board supports the work flow I have described above.
Ken Berry
