Very slow burning first disc

ChasMc wrote on 10/13/2023, 5:15 PM

When burning a disc (DVD or BD) the burning part just slowly chugs along. Example, today I had a 33 min. 1080i basic rendered recording that took 3 1/2 hours to burn it. But when made another copy, it only took 13 min. to make.

I do have the latest DVD Arch. Still using win10.

I've had this issue even with Pro20.

Comments

EricLNZ wrote on 10/14/2023, 5:02 AM

@ChasMc Please clarify what you mean by "burning". The entire preparation process or just the final stage when your disc is being physically burnt i.e written.

ChasMc wrote on 10/14/2023, 8:26 AM

It is in the third stage of physically doing the burn-in. The first two stages are good.

Dexcon wrote on 10/14/2023, 8:47 AM

DVD Architect is an old now long disontinued product. Being a standalone product, it's performance is not intinsically related to any Vegas Pro version other than Vegas Pro being able to render a video format compatible with DVDA. With a BD burn, DVDA will take quite some time to process the Vegas Pro render to an .ISO file. Once that .ISO file has been created, burns to BD discs are very much quicker because they use the .ISO file to burn from. That's why your 2nd burn took so much quicker - it was using the already processed BD format that DVDA had already performed. Its not that dissimilar with DVD burns only that the DVD creation process results in differenty named files to the BD .ISO result.

Cameras: Sony FDR-AX100E; GoPro Hero 11 Black Creator Edition

Installed: Vegas Pro 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 & 22, HitFilm Pro 2021.3, DaVinci Resolve Studio 19.0.3, BCC 2025, Mocha Pro 2025.0, NBFX TotalFX 7, Neat NR, DVD Architect 6.0, MAGIX Travel Maps, Sound Forge Pro 16, SpectraLayers Pro 11, iZotope RX11 Advanced and many other iZ plugins, Vegasaur 4.0

Windows 11

Dell Alienware Aurora 11:

10th Gen Intel i9 10900KF - 10 cores (20 threads) - 3.7 to 5.3 GHz

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER 8GB GDDR6 - liquid cooled

64GB RAM - Dual Channel HyperX FURY DDR4 XMP at 3200MHz

C drive: 2TB Samsung 990 PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 PCIe SSD

D: drive: 4TB Samsung 870 SATA SSD (used for media for editing current projects)

E: drive: 2TB Samsung 870 SATA SSD

F: drive: 6TB WD 7200 rpm Black HDD 3.5"

Dell Ultrasharp 32" 4K Color Calibrated Monitor

 

LAPTOP:

Dell Inspiron 5310 EVO 13.3"

i5-11320H CPU

C Drive: 1TB Corsair Gen4 NVMe M.2 2230 SSD (upgraded from the original 500 GB SSD)

Monitor is 2560 x 1600 @ 60 Hz

ChasMc wrote on 10/14/2023, 8:58 AM

So then what do Vegas Pro users use now to do dvds & BD. At least the ones that still do that.

Dexcon wrote on 10/14/2023, 9:08 AM

So then what do Vegas Pro users use now to do dvds & BD.

It's not just Vegas Pro, it's almost all NLEs (unless they have a proprietory DVD/BD creator).

There's not very much around any more - streaming, cloud, YT, social media and memory cards are now king.. Wikipedia lists the disc options thus:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_optical_disc_authoring_software

BTW, I still sucessfully use DVDA 6.0 for creating BD discs.

Cameras: Sony FDR-AX100E; GoPro Hero 11 Black Creator Edition

Installed: Vegas Pro 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 & 22, HitFilm Pro 2021.3, DaVinci Resolve Studio 19.0.3, BCC 2025, Mocha Pro 2025.0, NBFX TotalFX 7, Neat NR, DVD Architect 6.0, MAGIX Travel Maps, Sound Forge Pro 16, SpectraLayers Pro 11, iZotope RX11 Advanced and many other iZ plugins, Vegasaur 4.0

Windows 11

Dell Alienware Aurora 11:

10th Gen Intel i9 10900KF - 10 cores (20 threads) - 3.7 to 5.3 GHz

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER 8GB GDDR6 - liquid cooled

64GB RAM - Dual Channel HyperX FURY DDR4 XMP at 3200MHz

C drive: 2TB Samsung 990 PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 PCIe SSD

D: drive: 4TB Samsung 870 SATA SSD (used for media for editing current projects)

E: drive: 2TB Samsung 870 SATA SSD

F: drive: 6TB WD 7200 rpm Black HDD 3.5"

Dell Ultrasharp 32" 4K Color Calibrated Monitor

 

LAPTOP:

Dell Inspiron 5310 EVO 13.3"

i5-11320H CPU

C Drive: 1TB Corsair Gen4 NVMe M.2 2230 SSD (upgraded from the original 500 GB SSD)

Monitor is 2560 x 1600 @ 60 Hz