Multi pronged render problem

jackstreetdemon wrote on 7/17/2007, 9:05 AM
Hi. I want to combine 3 separate veg files into a master and burn this to a DVD. I find that if I nest them on a timeline then render them (mpeg2) I get some graphic vibration (titles, photo of a women in a polka dot dress, etc). This vibration does not occur when I render them from their respective veg files And I found that I can't copy and paste the timelines into a master because audio envelopes disappear in the process. Any suggestions? I' m using Vegas 7.0d

Comments

jrazz wrote on 7/17/2007, 9:29 AM
Are the project properties different than the nested veg's? Maybe you have a field issue. Take a look at that and see if you need to change your field order on your master project file.

j razz
jackstreetdemon wrote on 7/17/2007, 2:11 PM
The field order was the same on both. But I'm new to this stuff so let me give you some more into.

I shot the footage in 24p, captured and edited it in three separate veg files. Then when I brought them into the master file and began to render it. I had to set the fps to 29.97 with the field order set to "lower field first". This produced good video except the graphics are vibrating.

This leads me to this question: on the original files , the working files, should I have set the template to NTSC DV 24p (720x480, 23.976 fps), instead of Custom (720x480, 23.976 fps) - "Lower field first"? Would this account for the graphic issues?

Alternatively, I did figure out how to copy an envelope so I can, in effect "rebuild" the sequences in the master file, but it's more work. I did a short test render of a part of one of the segments and the results are lovely. The graphics are solid. I'd love to get the same results using the nested files. My nest step is to switch the settings and rerender? Thanks for the assistance!
jackstreetdemon wrote on 7/19/2007, 9:51 AM
Setting th template on the source veg file to NTSC DV 24p (720x480, 23.976 fps), and setting the template on the master file to Custom (720x480, 23.976 fps) - "Lower field first" eliminated the problem. Rendering the nested veg files from the master file yielded excellently preforming title graphics. Polka dots, lines and words in photographs displayed solid without vibration. .