Comments

Nat wrote on 4/24/2005, 6:31 PM
Old solution : render your video, re import it and stretch it again.

New solution, save your video as a veg file and nest the veg file, stretch it once again.
rs170a wrote on 4/24/2005, 6:40 PM
Right-click on the video track, select "Properties" and change the playback rate to 4.0 for an additional 400% increase.

Mike
omar wrote on 4/24/2005, 7:13 PM
I didn't know about the 400%. its slightly faster but I need it about double 400. maybe 1000%.

I did render and then nest again as mentioned and it worked as I wanted, but that would take very long. ..

How is it possible to nest a .veg in a .veg?
scottshackrock wrote on 4/24/2005, 7:28 PM
with V6, drag and drop!
vicmilt wrote on 4/24/2005, 7:41 PM
if you're doing a lot of speedup type stuff, try some (relatively) inexpensive software at: http://www.tucows.com/preview/319657.html
called MotionPerfect.

It's shareware, under $50 and works great both for speedup and slowdown.
rs170a wrote on 4/24/2005, 7:44 PM
Doing the velocity envelope gives you 300%. Adding the properties trick I mentioned increases this 4X, resulting in a 1200% increase.

Mike

edit: to really go crazy with speed, take a look at Time Bandit, a part of Veggie Toolkit.
omar wrote on 4/24/2005, 8:44 PM
For the speed I need, the best results have been to render the footage and then reimport into vegas and speed it up more...It just takes longer than needed to have to render, import and render again...
I wish i had vegas 6 to import .veg into .veg :)

I'm looking into those extensions too to save me the time of having to render twice...especially when the clips get longer
johnmeyer wrote on 4/24/2005, 8:49 PM
I think some of the script-based add-ons have ways of speeding up beyond 1200%.
Spot|DSE wrote on 4/24/2005, 8:49 PM
Try the trial of TimeBandit; you'll be glad you did.