This is my first video that I've made & the last event in my video is running as in fast forward, I;ve tried to delete & re-insert & it's still running fast. I've tried expanding the event & that doesn't do any good either. Any suggests?
does it look that way when you review it on the camera?
how did you capture it? all at once?
you can slow down the video some by pressing the control button and then hover over the end of the clip till you see a box and squiggly line - left click and drag. this will slow it down but beware anything other that a small amount will make the sound choppy (in the default setting) you have to change the default setting to allow the audio to "resample" slower. I dont think this is your solution - I think your problem is on the front end either with the camera itself or in the capture.
it's all one capture w/ my handycam DVD.
I did what you suggested & thanks but it's still running faster than the other video. And the voice event along w/ the event reports it's w/n the same event. I've tried everything I have read to do. THank you for your help
Try playing the clip outside of Vegas, like using Windows Media Player or Video Capture or something like that. Does it show the clip at a normal playback rate? If not then I agree, it got captured that way.
Just to make sure, right click on the event on your timeline and select "Properties"; look at "Playback rate". Does it say "1.000"? If not, change it to 1.
If you are desperate you can slow down the event by holding the CTRL key while you click/grab the edge of the event and then drag it out to be longer (or change the playback rate as described above). The quality won't be that great, but you can make it play at a "normal" rate that way.
I played it in my handycam & it's in slow motion. When I try to play it in Media player it reads as if the disc was blank. WHich now confuses me as to why it's in triple play on Vegas. I did have to change the playback to 1 it was @ .2 At least your suggestions are making it a little better.
Actually, I meant play the captured clip, not the original disc, using Media Player.
I don't believe you can read the disk using Media Player unless you "finish" the disk (I don't use DVD cameras, so I can't describe it better than that).