denodigital Guest | Hello: I’ve been trying to use Sony Vegas 5.0 ever sinse I got it a few weeks ago and I can’t get it to work; Below is a chronology from my conversing with another user group on the issue; maybe one of you can assist me; Thanks.
First Post:
This is a Sony Vegas 5.0 user. I am having a problem with Sony Vegas 5.0, when I am attempting to capture video. I connect the USB cable fine, and can view the video while it streams through my computer/on the screen, within the program, but when I hit capture video, it begins to get choppy, and jerky, like it’s in slow motion. When stop and play back, it is recorded the same way. As for the music, during streaming, or capturing, or playback, it sounds fine, only the video get choppy.
I read that it may be due to dropped frames, or not choosing the right video card option in set, but I can’t find where to enable/stop that from happening. I am using a digital Sony video camera so there should be some compatibility there. Help.
Also, read a lot of the user manual but there are no answers there, as far as I can read.
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Second Post:
Did a ton of troubleshooting this weekend; I found in the help index, under troubleshooting, that, because I have the Sony Vegas 5.0 installed on my 160 MB hard drive, which uses Windows XP, that I am suppose to capture/render DV video to another drive, which I did and it works (with the exception of 20 or so dropped frames, which is far less than the 200 - 300 I was getting when I was capturing to the same hard drive as the Vegas is installed); Now all I have to do is figure out why I’m still dropping frames; On the drive I a capturing to, I have installed a software that I use to record/edit digital music and that’s all; the operating system for that 120 MB drive is Windows 2000; I wondering if the dropped frames is due to the differences in the operating systems (XP on the drive that has the Vegas program vs. Windows 2000, which is on the drive that is capturing the video), or is it dirty heads, or if any one has death with this whole confusing process before. Thanks again. brw459@yahoo.com
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Third Post:
When I say “requires to much attention” what I mean is, I have a high powered system that I had built just for digital music recording and video editing. I can’t recall all the specs on it right now, but it has almost 800 megs of ram, 120 (video side) and 160 (music side) hard drives, lots of memory, excellent processor, it’s a brand new system. I only use it for these 2 functions, with the exception of watching DVD’s or burning CD’s. When installing the digital music software, I encountered a few problems but have that worked out. I’ve tried Pinnical, Ulead, Movie Maker, Sony Picture Package, a generic editing software that came with my digital camera, and now Sony Vegas 5.0. With Pinnical, the problem is that it is not Micro Soft compatible and is a proprietary software, meaning it takes over other computer components and does not allow them to work properly with it and other components. Movie Maker gives me poor quality. Picture Package is not made for editing, just capturing and burning a DVD. Ulead is giving me choppy/jerky capture like Vegas. In essence, I can’t seem to get any of them to do what I need them to do, which is to simply capture and edit. I think there’s one more product I tried that also had poor quality. Now Vegas requires me to have 2 hard drives, one to install the software to and the other to capture to, which, had my computer been a normal store bought system, it would only have one hard drive, which makes more costly. Like they force you to buy more stuff to get it to work. That’s what I mean. It’s been a pain and time consuming and I have a project that’s backing up on me. I need a software that is good, doesn’t cost over $500, and has good quality.
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Final Post:
Last night, I went into Admin Tools and checked which programs were running in the background; I used some internet tips (from various sources) to either set programs on manual or disable it altogether; I did this for both hard drives; I retested capturing and got the same choppy, jerky video with static in the audio, then the screen would just freeze, and post an error message about an occuring while capturing; I tried the same in Ulead and got the same type result, and same type of message, which included something about the screen size not being correct (or something like that; I’m at work now, can’t remember); also, both my hard drives are on the same channel (ch. 1) and my CD-Rom is on Ch. 2; I have the hard drive jumpers set so the Win XP drive is the master and the Windows 2000 hard drive is the slave; what I propose to do is disconnect the CD-Rom and connect that cable to the Windows 2000 hard drive; then I will change the jumper configuration, changing the master/slave setup; I’ll leave the CD-Rom diconnected; then I’ll try to capture again and see if having the hard drives on separate channels will help; do you think, now that I’ve tried to capture so many time, causing errors, capturing the bad footage, the freeze-ups, etc., do you think I should uninstall the Sony Vegas and reload it? During these test I’ve defragmented my hard drive already. (brw459@yahoo.com) |