unable to force a crossfade

tfc wrote on 11/6/2003, 4:46 PM
After putting two events next to each other, I tried to overlap one with the other to generate a crossfade. The automatic crossfade button was on. After hitting the expanded track button, I saw that one of the tracks had black diagonal lines going from left to right at approx. a 45 degree angle on them. Only the portion of the event which overlapped the other event had this on it. Even though these two events were overlapped, Vegas would not generate a crossfade and the net result was a "hard" cut when the timeline was played in the preview window. To make matters worse, after finagling with it for a few minutes to "force" a crossfade, Vegas crashed on me and gave an error message with a list of gobblety-gook codes, which only a computer programmer could understand. Two questions- 1) what do the "hatched" black diagonal lines mean on the event? I don't recall seeing that before, 2) why would Vegas crash on me like it did? Does anyone have any plausible explanations? Thanks!

For whatever it's worth, my computer is 2.8G, 1G RAM, two hard drives - one 5400rpm and one 7200rpm. I don't think it's my computer.

Comments

BillyBoy wrote on 11/6/2003, 6:48 PM
Sort of...

I've see something similar several times mostly If I've been working a long time, with no warning there will be hash lines through most of the text inside the Vegas Explorer window or some of the icons or lettering on the menu or tool bar will start to break up or have thicker lines through it. A couple times a ghost image of either one of the FX control windows or the preview window would duplicate itself and appear in the upper left hand corner besides being where it should be.

Rebooting always cures it. If you see weird things, immediately save your project and get out of there. Most likely Windows is about to take a dive.
tfc wrote on 11/6/2003, 6:55 PM
Thanks for the input, BB. It sounds like it may be some kind of computer glitch or something. Do the black hatched lines on an event mean anything, or is it a software glitch?
BillyBoy wrote on 11/6/2003, 8:08 PM
They don't do anything to the file. Once I reboot they're gone. It could be some interaction from the video card or something goofy going on in the background. I've seen it happen in other applications too once in a great while, so very doubtful its Vegas. Seems more like a sign Windows needs to start fresh. I know it can kind of freak you out the first time you see it. On the scale of things to worry about I woudln't even rank it a one. I just responded so you know you're not alone in seeing such stuff.
mark30 wrote on 11/8/2003, 4:55 PM
Vegas takes care of your health. If you have been editing for too long it starts annoying you so you'll say: I try again tomorrow..
You'll last longer ;)

Does rebooting help?
My pc gets a little itchy sometimes when it's been working too long.. I'll buy a new cooler next week..

mark