A few problems I need solved...

kingkool682 wrote on 11/30/2002, 10:46 PM
Well it all started when my extra hard drive crashed. It used to be known as drive D: and had nothing but mp3's on it. no big deal). Now my A/V drive (formerly known as E:) is now D. the problem is Vegas is starting to act up. I want to either re-install or repair some files but it won't let me. It comes up with an error saying:

Error 1327; Invalid Drive E:
How can i get around this so i can un-install and re-install/repair vegas?
Also, When ever i click on the Chroma Keyer on the video FX tab and it ends up crashing vegas w/ the following message:

Sonic Foundry Vegas Video 3.0
Version 3.0c (Build 138)
Exception 0xC000008E (float divide by zero) IP:0x5DE8E876
In Module 'VIDPCORE.DLL' at Address 0x5DE00000 + 0x8E876
Thread: Transpool:DoTransition ID=0xFFF84649 Stack=0xD9E000-0xDA0000
Registers:
EAX=00d9ecc0 CS=0167 EIP=5de8e87c EFLGS=00210246
EBX=00c0b854 SS=016f ESP=00d9ebfc EBP=00d9f8e0
ECX=00d9ec18 DS=016f ESI=00000000 FS=106f
EDX=00d9ec48 ES=016f EDI=00c0ba1c GS=5f1e
Bytes at CS:EIP:
5DE8E87C: D9 5C 24 14 DD 00 D9 5C .\... 5DE8E884: 24 1C DD 40 08 D9 5C 24 .@..\$
Stack Dump:
00D9EBFC: 00D9EC48 00C90000 + 10EC48
00D9EC00: 00D9EC18 00C90000 + 10EC18
00D9EC04: 00C0BA0C 00B70000 + 9BA0C
00D9EC08: 00000064
00D9EC0C: 0000003C
00D9EC10: 00000000
00D9EC14: 00000000
00D9EC18: 00000064
00D9EC1C: 0000003C
00D9EC20: 5DEBC498 5DE00000 + BC498 (VIDPCORE.DLL)
00D9EC24: 00D9EC78 00C90000 + 10EC78
00D9EC28: 00D9EC7C 00C90000 + 10EC7C
00D9EC2C: 00D9EC84 00C90000 + 10EC84
00D9EC30: 00D9EC80 00C90000 + 10EC80
00D9EC34: 02DA5C04 02B40000 + 265C04
00D9EC38: 00D9F17C 00C90000 + 10F17C
> 00D9EC60: 5DE884B4 5DE00000 + 884B4 (VIDPCORE.DLL)
> 00D9EC68: 5DE88515 5DE00000 + 88515 (VIDPCORE.DLL)
> 00D9EE1C: 007D4432 00400000 + 3D4432 (VEGAS30.EXE)
00D9EE20: 00000000
00D9EE24: 00000000
00D9EE28: 00000000
00D9EE2C: 00000000
> 00D9EE64: 007D4432 00400000 + 3D4432 (VEGAS30.EXE)
00D9EE68: 6CD50000 63080000 + 9CD0000
> 00D9EE6C: 02270000 02020000 + 250000 (SFTRANS1.DLL)
00D9EE70: 00000000
00D9EE74: 00010000
00D9EE78: 20000000 1C290000 + 3D70000
> 00D9EE7C: 010CCC32 01000000 + CCC32 (VEGAS30K.DLL)
00D9EE80: 51B80000 48070000 + 9B10000
00D9EE84: 81E95404 81E8E000 + 7404
00D9EE88: 000004E4
00D9EE8C: 00D9EF18 00C90000 + 10EF18
> 00D9EE90: BFF7ED78 BFF70000 + ED78 (KERNEL32.DLL)
> 00D9EE94: 5DF2B658 5DE00000 + 12B658 (VIDPCORE.DLL)
> 00D9EF7C: 5DE10000 5DE00000 + 10000 (VIDPCORE.DLL)
> 00D9EF8C: 02000001 01EC0000 + 140001 (VFPLUGS.DLL)
00D9EF90: 00200BE0
00D9EF94: 0002CB20
00D9EF98: 8FC803E0 8AB68000 + 51183E0
00D9EF9C: 16773847 10020000 + 6753847
> 00D9EFB4: 02000001 01EC0000 + 140001 (VFPLUGS.DLL)
- - -
00D9FFF0: 870F5F1E 8701C000 + D9F1E
00D9FFF4: 85AB0FEC 85A91000 + 1FFEC
00D9FFF8: BFF89DD5 BFF70000 + 19DD5 (KERNEL32.DLL)
00D9FFFC: 00000000

I can't render or accept mpeg 1/2 files or Windows media files. Is there something i have to do to the bios? Can i just delete the vegas folder and go into the registry and delete those files there and then try to re-install? I'm afraid to do that actually because I can still do work in Vegas except for those few things mentioned above. Can anyone offer me any solution to this annoying problem?

Comments

grue wrote on 12/1/2002, 1:13 PM
I had the same situation when drive letters changed and I was unable to get it back to what it was (I forget the exact circumstances). I tried a variety of different things installing/uninstalling/registry editing. Nothing worked (it always looked back at the older settings). It was deeply entrenched in the registry.

I ended up reinstalling the OS (which I do occasionally anyway).

If you are using NT or XP you can try changing the drive letter back to what it was.

Tom
kingkool682 wrote on 12/1/2002, 2:08 PM
Grrrr... Well, i hope to get another hard drive in the near future, hopefully that will set everything straight. I have win 98se so i can't do any of those little XP tricks.
riredale wrote on 12/1/2002, 10:23 PM
Here's something you could do to make your video drive back into the E drive. First, you need to partition your C drive into two sections. You can do this very easily with a program like PartitionMagic. The second partition can be very small, just large enough for Windows to assign a drive letter to it.

The problem with creating an extra partition is that Windows will see the drives and call your Windows partition C, the video drive D, and the new partition (on the first drive) E. To fix this, use PartitionMagic again to change your video drive. Tell it to make it a "logical" drive, not the "primary" drive it is now. The next time Windows reboots, it will see the C drive, call the new partition D, and the second drive (your video drive) E.