Vegas Movie Studio Crash - low on memory?

Humber wrote on 5/29/2015, 8:01 AM
I have Movie Studio 10 and now crashes when rendering video in .avi,; wmv, ; mp4 and I have tried the others all with no success.. It says I am low on memory. I have 16 RAM plus 2 n the video card with a i7 processor. Any suggestions? Please My old AMD PC with 2 Ram and a standard video card did better.

Comments

Shinra Bansho wrote on 5/29/2015, 8:44 AM
I had the same problem. In my case (though on Vegas Pro instead of Movie Studio), simply turning off GPU acceleration solved the problem.

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OldSmoke wrote on 5/29/2015, 8:46 AM
Humber

Which model of graphic card do you have?

BTW: If you ask hardware questions it is important that your system specs are filled in and made visible to the forum.

Proud owner of Sony Vegas Pro 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 & 13 and now Magix VP15&16.

System Spec.:
Motherboard: ASUS X299 Prime-A

Ram: G.Skill 4x8GB DDR4 2666 XMP

CPU: i7-9800x @ 4.6GHz (custom water cooling system)
GPU: 1x AMD Vega Pro Frontier Edition (water cooled)
Hard drives: System Samsung 970Pro NVME, AV-Projects 1TB (4x Intel P7600 512GB VROC), 4x 2.5" Hotswap bays, 1x 3.5" Hotswap Bay, 1x LG BluRay Burner

PSU: Corsair 1200W
Monitor: 2x Dell Ultrasharp U2713HM (2560x1440)

rs170a wrote on 5/29/2015, 8:52 AM
Humber, here's a post courtesy of Steve Mann from the Creative Cow Vegas forum.

Low Memory or Out of Memory does not mean "Not enough RAM", though adding RAM can sometimes fix a "Low Memory" waning. A "Low Memory" warning usually means that you have exceeded your commit limit. You need either a bigger page file, more physical memory, or both.

One of the biggest sources of confusion over Windows memory usage is the whole concept of virtual memory compared to physical memory. Windows organizes memory, physical and virtual, into pages. Each page is a fixed size (typically 4 KB). To make things more confusing, there’s also a page file (sometimes referred to as a paging file and dynamic RAM). Many Windows users still think of this as a swap file, a bit of disk storage that is only called into play when you absolutely run out of physical RAM. In versions of Windows starting with Vista, that is no longer the case. The most important thing to realize is that physical memory and the page file added together equal the commit limit, which is the total amount of virtual memory that all processes can reserve and commit.

All Windows since XP (and Unix/Linux for that matter) always wants to have page space. Always. Programs (including drivers and codecs) like to and are allowed to pre-allocate as much memory as they want. Even if they are never ever going to actually use it. Sometimes those programs properly deallocate memory, sometimes they don't (resulting in "memory leak"). Sometimes, programs leave parts of themselves in allocated memory just in case you are going to run that program again. (MS Word, Excel and other Office programs are particularly adept at this). If you have no page file and a program wants to commit some for itself, your PC will crash (AKA, BSOD, or Blue Screen of Death).

Paging file configuration is in the System properties, which you can get to by typing "sysdm.cpl" into the Run dialog, clicking on the Advanced tab, clicking on the Performance Options button, clicking on the Advanced tab, and then clicking on the Change button. I would suggest a value of 1.5X the currently allocated value. The old advice of 2X or 3X your RAM is, well, old advice when a few MB of RAM was normal. The largest paging file that you can select in Windows is 4,095 megabytes (MB).

Also, Windows supports up to 16 paging files, but each must be on a separate volume, so if you have more than one internal disk drive you could try enabling a Paging File on your second hard-disk. DO NOT put a paging file on an external drive because if it's not present when Windows boots, then Windows will crash.

For more information, see http://support.microsoft.com/kb/237740 and http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2267427


Mike
vkmast wrote on 5/29/2015, 9:08 AM
In addition to what Mike quotes, remember that Vegas Movie Studio 10 (and VMS Platinum 10) is a 32-bit application and as such "is running up against a built-in memory limitation."
32 bit -vs- 64 bit
The OP might also do a Search on the Movie Studio forum, e.g. Words: low memory for threads such as this one.