I sometimes do weddings and break them up into chapters of 10 - 15 minutes each. I'm always weary of going over 15 minutes from what I've read on the forums.
What is the longest single project anyone here has rendered to?
My personal record is a bit over 2 hr. but I know folks on here have gone much longer.
Source footage was SD DV-AVI files and lots of graphics and images.
I frequently render 2-3 hours long interviews sessions for clients without any problem. This is from AVCHD rushs to SD DVD however. I did not yet done it for HD-DVD.
I would never go to the hassle of breaking everything in short parts.
Shure, very long SD to SD renders do not cause any problems also.
Mike the couple could be divorced and the clip is still rendering
What I want to know is how many changes back and forth for a 30 second TV billboard PAL after sign off in one day, mine is…. 5
And 2 days later the clincher …the client was running it in cinema's.. ..hey its cool but like it’s a bit blurry and blocky???
Just for the heck of it one time i combined three movies i enjoy into one single file. They actually run as a continuous story so i wanted to cut out the credits & titles inbetween so that i could experience it as one continuous running sequence. The result was about 7 hours. No hitch at all, though that was probably back in Vegas 3.
A lot of the local theatre productions can run about 2.5 to 2.75 hours. There's never any issue with those. Of course, in these cases i tend to have fewer than a half-dozen events on the timeline. I've done these will all versions of Vegas, up through 9.0b (haven't had one since 9.0c came out). The longest one was about 4 hours, which was edited in Vegas 7.
More complex projects with hundreds of events probably tend to be under an hour for me, but even still that's way over 15 minutes.
I think it has more to do with the complexity of the project than the length .I did a couple of plays for people, easy edits and about 1 hour and a half, no problem. Lots of edits, different sources, plenty of CC and my ability to render stuff that is 10 mins long or so goes out the window.
Until....
I tried Blink's memory hack. Made my most complex renders go smoothly, and I have not noticed any other adverse side effects. Yet....
1. If a currently used Vegas version/OS version combination is stable for my single clips of the format I'm currently using (like the XDCAM EX 1080/25p),
2. Then I have no problems whatsoever editing and rendering even a 2hour + project, with quite a lot CC, compositing, titling, etc etc.
The big problem is the "if" part in point 1, though:(
Vegas can handle long renders with no problem, I have done 2 plus hours several times with a variety of different levels of vfx, cuts, media types etc.
Over the years if there was a hang up, I discovered that it was a RAM issue (fixed) and if you remember the old single core Athalons, they used to have a heating issue.
I routinely go 3+ hours with multicam and up to five audio tracks.
I have found if I save, close, and re-open every couple of hours during editing, and again before rendering, the process goes quite smoothly, and free of "surprises." Having the recent project backups doesn't hurt a bit, either.
The longest project I ever did was a seminar that was 8 hours long but it was an easy multicam edit.
The longest render I ever had was 3 days and some change and it was when I was using 3d track motion extensively in a project along with some pretty lengthy fx chains.
I do a ½ hr. to 45 min. AVCHD project every week rendered to SD and have no render issues - not a single crash yet. Sometimes I use my Vegas 64 and sometimes my 32 - both stable.