![]() Aren't you concerned with using a lot of your bit rate on footage that doesn't need 8Mbps though? I am just learning this stuff, so don't get me wrong-just trying to figured out the best way to do this. ![]() The footage is of a high school volleyball game with simple editing, and no special effects to speak of. I believe the settings I used in the VBR are 9Mbps max, 7.5Mbps average and the default for the minimum (I think it's 192Kbps). ![]() But the render can chug along tonight while I sleep-no big deal, as I am under no time constraint whatsoever.īut I wonder how many others use the Two Pass option with VBR rendering?īy the way, my system is an Intel Q9450 quad core at 3.2GHz, running XP with 4GB ram. Obviously some of the extra time is because of the two pass option, but I haven't done any other projects in HD yet so I simply don't have anything to compare it to. ![]() I was amazed at the render time calculated for the job! Normally the same type of project would take about 35-40 minutes with DV but it's going to take about 5 times that with the HD footage I captured tonight. After watching some of Gary's videos, and also reading some information I found on the various Vegas forums, I decided to render (to MPEG-2 for DVD) using variable bit rate using Two Pass rendering. ![]() I am rendering my first project with my new Sony SR11 HD camera-which is also my first HD render of any significance. ![]()
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