Driven nuts by jittery video

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I've been working on a problem now with Vegas 4.0 that's driving me
absolutely insane, and would like to see if you've heard of this problem
once before.

I've captured a 1 hour and 30 minute continuous video stream. When I render
it (some sections edited out) to DVD, I wind up getting what appears to be
rendered frames that are a mix of the prior frame and the current frame, so
motion is very, very jittery. Some specifics:

1) If I view the source video, this problem is not present.
2) If I render the ENTIRE sequence unedited to DVD, the problem doesn't
occur
3) The jitteryness starts at the point of the first edit (video, even
seconds leading up to it, isn't jittery)
4) It's not an upper field/lower field issue.

So it appears the problem is with the edit points or the trimming I'm doing.
Has anyone encountered this problem with either Vegas or another video
editing application? I'm desperate to get my daughter's early baby video to
DVD in a good quality fashion, so any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!

-->Neil
 
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Neil Bradley <nb_no_spam@synthcom.com> wrote:
> I've been working on a problem now with Vegas 4.0 that's driving me
> absolutely insane, and would like to see if you've heard of this
> problem once before.
>
> I've captured a 1 hour and 30 minute continuous video stream. When I
> render it (some sections edited out) to DVD, I wind up getting what
> appears to be rendered frames that are a mix of the prior frame and
> the current frame, so motion is very, very jittery. Some specifics:
>
> 1) If I view the source video, this problem is not present.
> 2) If I render the ENTIRE sequence unedited to DVD, the problem
> doesn't occur
> 3) The jitteryness starts at the point of the first edit (video, even
> seconds leading up to it, isn't jittery)
> 4) It's not an upper field/lower field issue.
>
> So it appears the problem is with the edit points or the trimming I'm
> doing. Has anyone encountered this problem with either Vegas or
> another video editing application? I'm desperate to get my daughter's
> early baby video to DVD in a good quality fashion, so any advice
> would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
>
> -->Neil


There are a few things for you to check in this thread at
http://tinyurl.com/2zpem from the Sony forum.
HTH.

Mike
 
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On Sat, 3 Apr 2004 15:22:46 -0800, "Neil Bradley"
<nb_no_spam@synthcom.com> wrote:

>I've been working on a problem now with Vegas 4.0 that's driving me
>absolutely insane, and would like to see if you've heard of this problem
>once before.
>
>I've captured a 1 hour and 30 minute continuous video stream. When I render
>it (some sections edited out) to DVD, I wind up getting what appears to be
>rendered frames that are a mix of the prior frame and the current frame, so
>motion is very, very jittery. Some specifics:
>
>1) If I view the source video, this problem is not present.
>2) If I render the ENTIRE sequence unedited to DVD, the problem doesn't
>occur
>3) The jitteryness starts at the point of the first edit (video, even
>seconds leading up to it, isn't jittery)
>4) It's not an upper field/lower field issue.
>
>So it appears the problem is with the edit points or the trimming I'm doing.
>Has anyone encountered this problem with either Vegas or another video
>editing application? I'm desperate to get my daughter's early baby video to
>DVD in a good quality fashion, so any advice would be greatly appreciated.
>Thanks!
>
>-->Neil
>
Had some similar troubles in the early days - mine were caused by
intermixing Pal and NTSC - remember that NTSC is 60 cycles per second
and Pal is 50 - makes a lot of difference

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