Why vegas video suddenly displays this dialog box when im trying to print to DV tape:
80% of your projevt must be render. Any sugestion for not render?
Check to make sure that, on one or more of the video tracks, the "levels" slider has been knocked down below 100% (i.e. 99.8% or so). Move them all back to 100% and all should be back to normal.
Have you added some filters to the video tracks? This can also cause an entire track to need rendering. Or maybe filters to every clip? (or at least most clips?)
i work in a University editing clases and in this particular project i use just one camera with no effects and no filters just fades. In the past i resolve the problem copying the video and audio track and paste it in a new project and voila problem resolve. but not anymore.... please help me cause the render is going to be about 15 hours and i dont want to wait that long.
The Track FX (color balance) is slowing you down. Bypass or delete it, and you may render faster. It's the green button on the track header at the left-end of track1.
Agreed, in this case it's the color balance filter. That's why I asked if there were any effects added to the video track. Anything that affects the video track will require the entire track to be re-rendered instead of only transitions. Since I almost never use track level effects, this problem usually appears when I have accidentally slid the levels slider below 100% which also affects the whole track. Another possible location would have been a project level effect.
First: is this footage captured using Vegas Capture or Scenalyzer? If not, it may need to be rendered to DV.
Also, there might be a setting in the project, or your render template that slows you down, i.e. are you rendering to DV? Good quality? Default template?
There could be an FX (as Jet points out) like the track FX , that is on the output (by the preview window).
When I see a project that should be DV-in, DV-out but it is rendering slow, I check with a DV test clip to make sure the settings are all OK. YOu might try that.
Based on your veg file I can see nothing else out of the ordinary - unless your avi files are not in NTSC DV format. Another thing you *may* try, Create another video track. Select all pieces on the current video track and move them to the new track. Then, delete the current track and see if this makes a difference.
by default VV adds some FX to your audio stream. This will cause lengthy rendering to ocurr as well.
If I recall correctly, all of the audio always gets rendered for print-to-tape, regardless of audio FX. However, it's much quicker than video rendering. The rest of the tips in this thread apply to video rendering.