Its Nvidia and AMD that need to realize that theyve buggered up and include it in the next patch. Thanks again for the help with the Mainconcept issue. This generation GPUs do not work on Sony Vegas GPU rendering especially 11, as thats one of its main features, Sony Vegas have done the patching required for the 7XXX and the GTX 6XX series. So, my options seem to be, I either upload a blurry pixelated video that YouTube will accept, or I upload a great looking video that YouTube will compress into a blurry pixelated video.
However, it will be a frustrating thing if you have problems of importing video files to Sony Vegas, especially the video files are the so common MP4 files.
If I use my own settings, record my videos in CBR 80mbps with OBS and render at 50mbps with Vegas Pro, the end product looks great clear smooth video. For an HD workstation the minimum recommended system is a fast hyper-threaded quad-core and for 4K a 16-thread octa core would be a good idea. Sony Vegas Pro makes it easy to import and edit movies, images and music for creating your next video or audio masterpiece. If I follow YouTube standards, record my videos in CBR 40mbps with OBS and render in the recommended 15mbps with Vegas Pro, the end product looks terrible pixelation and blurry video. There’s no visible difference at all from mp4 to vp9 on my videos. I’ve tried the method of trimming a frame to trick YouTube into encoding the video as vp9, and it still pixelates the video. In the Video tab, set the mode as Bit Rate (Peak), format as Windows Media Video 9 and image. In the Audio tab, set the mode as CBR, format as Windows Media Audio 9.2 and attributed to 128 k-bps. Choose Freeze Frame at Cursor from the event hamburger menu. How do you freeze frame in Sony Vegas 16 Set the timeline cursor to the frame where you want to create the freeze-frame. But there’s nothing stopping you from opening Vegas again and continuing working on whatever other projects you have. Begin by clicking on File and select Render As. Can you pause rendering in Sony Vegas No.
I’ve tried recording and rendering using different bitrates. In this video tutorial, viewers learn how to render high definition videos in Sony Vegas Movie Studio.
Basically the render process is using as much memory as it can get (2gb) but at some point it doesnt release a part of memory it has reserved - it then tries to. I’ve tried a fair amount of things to remedy the problem. Sony Vegas Movie Studio Platinum is a 32bit program (Pro is 64bit) which runs well on 64 systems but has had this memory leak issue when rendering in all versions I can see to date. Choose File Render As Sony AVC/MVC in the Output Format dialog box. YouTube keeps pixelating my videos a lot. Unfortunately, uploading using the Mainconcept hasn’t fixed my issue.