I have just made a couple of dvds of the same video. The movie is about 1 hour 15 minutes long. First after capturing I edited and rendered in vms into avi. Then I used dvda to render into mpeg2, prepare and burn. The time it took to make the dvd in this manner was 3 hours and 35 minutes.
Being curious, I then rendered in vms the avi into mpeg2. Then I prepared and burned the dvd in dvda. The time it took to make the dvd in this manner was 2 hours and 25 minutes.
VMS has a much more efficient rendering engine. Which is what you would expect. The only time that you would want to render in dvda is when you have a video that has a length longer than 1 1/4 hour, give or take a couple of minutes. If it is longer you would need to use dvd shrink or a similar program to fit it to a dvd. Of course this would be another step and more time. But still considering the inefficiency of dvda rendering engine, it could still be quicker.
I assume that everyone else has pretty much the same experience. These times were just bare bones rendering. I did not add any effects or anything else to the video. I only cut out the extraneous parts.
Being curious, I then rendered in vms the avi into mpeg2. Then I prepared and burned the dvd in dvda. The time it took to make the dvd in this manner was 2 hours and 25 minutes.
VMS has a much more efficient rendering engine. Which is what you would expect. The only time that you would want to render in dvda is when you have a video that has a length longer than 1 1/4 hour, give or take a couple of minutes. If it is longer you would need to use dvd shrink or a similar program to fit it to a dvd. Of course this would be another step and more time. But still considering the inefficiency of dvda rendering engine, it could still be quicker.
I assume that everyone else has pretty much the same experience. These times were just bare bones rendering. I did not add any effects or anything else to the video. I only cut out the extraneous parts.