Comments

Chienworks wrote on 8/17/2005, 6:10 PM
Lots and lots and lots more details needed :

What format and file type did you render to?
What custom settings (if any) did you use?
What were the source files from? What formats?
How are you playing back the rendered output?
How long is the whole video?
Pdvideo1 wrote on 8/19/2005, 5:40 AM
I also have gone through the same problem. When I play it back, I think I'm watching a Kung Fu movie the Video is ahead or the audio is behind. When I put this together I was using the USB input cable from my Sony Digital Handycam. I was too cheap to go out and buy the the Sony I cable. Does this make a difference in down loading the captured video and audio into the Sony Movie Studio Program? Outside of that, I'm impressed with the ease of the program. The program output format was AVI. My total video length was 35 minutes. When loading everything into the completed project I used to default setting, I had a work project and I needed it yesterday so I went with whatever was already set.
Storyman wrote on 8/19/2005, 7:01 AM
USB could make a difference. Is it USB 1 or 2?

Also, make sure the basics are covered like shutting down all the programs running in the background and defragging the hard drive before capturing.

(One of the basics that a lot of people overlook is to remove unused temp files. You can do this by searching for *.tmp and deleting all of the files you find. The reason is that any old files are loaded into ram on boot up, which means that memory is unavailable for application use. Sometimes you'll find a file that won't delete. That's because it is currently being used. To get all of the files that need to be deleted start in safe mode.)