I just sent this to tech support, but I thought I'd post it here as well. This problem happens with Vegas 13.0, build 310.
I have a simple cuts-only 50 minute wedding video using video from my Sony CX700V camcorder which was recorded using the 1920x1080 60p setting. Here is a link to a very short sample of one clip
Download Sample Clip
When I render this using the standard MPEG-2 DVD Architect Widescreen template, I get corrupt video. I used Womble to cut out a small portion of the 50-minute MPEG-2 file in order to provide an example of the horrendous corruption I am seeing. Here is that clip:
Download Example of MPEG-2 Corruption
I think similar things have been reported before.
In my attempts to find the cause of this bug, I discovered two workarounds. One workaround is to first render everything to Cineform. This works, but obviously it takes more time, and I happened to be low on disk space, so this wasn't a good solution for this project.
I then went to the Options --> Preferences --> Video tab and unchecked "GPU acceleration of video processing."
This solved the problem.
So I think this is yet another GPU bug.
BTW, I did try to reduce this down to a small test case, so I could send the media files to Sony tech support along with a VEG file. However, when I made project smaller by deleting most of the media on the timeline, keeping only the portion of the project where the problem appeared in the rendered video, the resulting twenty second render resulted in good video. Thus, the problem appears be related to what video surrounds the problem area.
Just to be totally complete about my setup and test conditions, I did make one set of modifications to the default DVD Architect MPEG-2 template: I reduced maximum bitrate from 9,500,000 to 8,300,000; I increased average bitrate to 7,000,000; I increased minimum bitrate to 512,000; and I enabled "two-pass" encoding.
My video card is an NVidia GeForce 9800 GT. The driver version is 285.62. I would like to update this, but the NVidia site is very confusing as to what driver I should use.
Other relevant information, in order to satisfy the "system spec police:"
Operating System
Platform: Windows 7 (64-bit)
Version: 6.01.7600
Processor
Class: Intel(R) Core(TM) i7 CPU 965 @ 3.20GHz
Identifier: GenuineIntel
Number of processors: 8
MMX available: Yes
SSE available: Yes
SSE2 available: Yes
SSE3 available: Yes
SSSE3 available: Yes
SSE4.1 available: Yes
SSE4.2 available: Yes
Display
Primary: 1680x1050x32
Memory
Physical memory: 6,135.1 MB
Paging memory available: 12,268.4 MB
I have a simple cuts-only 50 minute wedding video using video from my Sony CX700V camcorder which was recorded using the 1920x1080 60p setting. Here is a link to a very short sample of one clip
Download Sample Clip
When I render this using the standard MPEG-2 DVD Architect Widescreen template, I get corrupt video. I used Womble to cut out a small portion of the 50-minute MPEG-2 file in order to provide an example of the horrendous corruption I am seeing. Here is that clip:
Download Example of MPEG-2 Corruption
I think similar things have been reported before.
In my attempts to find the cause of this bug, I discovered two workarounds. One workaround is to first render everything to Cineform. This works, but obviously it takes more time, and I happened to be low on disk space, so this wasn't a good solution for this project.
I then went to the Options --> Preferences --> Video tab and unchecked "GPU acceleration of video processing."
This solved the problem.
So I think this is yet another GPU bug.
BTW, I did try to reduce this down to a small test case, so I could send the media files to Sony tech support along with a VEG file. However, when I made project smaller by deleting most of the media on the timeline, keeping only the portion of the project where the problem appeared in the rendered video, the resulting twenty second render resulted in good video. Thus, the problem appears be related to what video surrounds the problem area.
Just to be totally complete about my setup and test conditions, I did make one set of modifications to the default DVD Architect MPEG-2 template: I reduced maximum bitrate from 9,500,000 to 8,300,000; I increased average bitrate to 7,000,000; I increased minimum bitrate to 512,000; and I enabled "two-pass" encoding.
My video card is an NVidia GeForce 9800 GT. The driver version is 285.62. I would like to update this, but the NVidia site is very confusing as to what driver I should use.
Other relevant information, in order to satisfy the "system spec police:"
Operating System
Platform: Windows 7 (64-bit)
Version: 6.01.7600
Processor
Class: Intel(R) Core(TM) i7 CPU 965 @ 3.20GHz
Identifier: GenuineIntel
Number of processors: 8
MMX available: Yes
SSE available: Yes
SSE2 available: Yes
SSE3 available: Yes
SSSE3 available: Yes
SSE4.1 available: Yes
SSE4.2 available: Yes
Display
Primary: 1680x1050x32
Memory
Physical memory: 6,135.1 MB
Paging memory available: 12,268.4 MB