I am getting ready to edit a 90 minute project on Vegas and just this morning, I had problems with the system freezing and giving me an error message stating that it was unable to render media files or save back up .veg files. The error message also said it was unable to determine the cause of the problem.
Vegas would give the same message when I tried to save the .veg under another name. I have my system set-up with a 1 TB internal HD and two external 1 TB HD. I finally saved the .veg to my internal HD and for the moment, I was able to start rendering again. However, this makes me extremely nervous about starting into a big project and potentially having the system glitch out on me and losing an enormous amount of work. This is not about me not backing up my work as I go. This is about Vegas freezing up and giving me an error that seems to corrupt the .veg files and make rendering impossible.
Assuming that perhaps I'm doing something wrong by having the .veg file on the same drive as the source and rendered files, is there some best practice about where your source files, rendered files, and .veg files should go. Just from my experience, it doesn't seem Vegas likes having the .veg files mixed in with the source and rendered files. I'm only saying this because after I saved the .veg to another drive, the error stopped and I was able to render again.
Also, in order to protect against a glitch like this from causing so much havoc, I was wondering rather than nesting .veg files, which I don't feel comfortable about doing at all, would be it better to render them out 8-10 minute clips as SONY AVC Intra in an .MXF container and then once I'm ready to render the entire project, bring those clips all together in a master timeline and render out? That way I don't think Vegas will stress out the same as if they were .veg files.
My original source footage is AVC codec from a Sony A7S, and it shows as a match on the render page. I figured the .mxf would preserve the most data versus any other setting. Like I said, I just don't feel comfortable nesting .veg files, especially after today when I wasn't even able to save back up copies of my original .veg file.
I have rarely had issues with Vegas glitching like it today, and so I've found this entire incident disconcerting to say the least. I knew it would be a challenge to edit a 90 minute project in Vegas and was preparing to break my project down into small pieces, but did not expect it to start glitching so soon.
Any thoughts and ideas are appreciated.