- HOW DO I ADJUST THE VIDEO BITRATE IN SONY VEGAS PRO 11.0 HOW TO
- HOW DO I ADJUST THE VIDEO BITRATE IN SONY VEGAS PRO 11.0 MOVIE
- HOW DO I ADJUST THE VIDEO BITRATE IN SONY VEGAS PRO 11.0 1080P
If you're keeping the 4K resolution, how are you getting tiny 4K files? Seems like any extra compression you do on the 100Mbps 4K files is going to hurt the quality.Īnother way to save hard drive space if that's the issue is to finish the edit and then delete any source files that weren't used. Import new 4-8gb compound clip(s) back to FCP X.Send 64gb compound clip(s) to Compressor.4k recording at max bitrate (100) - no question here - why would you go with less if it's only temporary?.If you shoot in SLOG2 or SLOG3, you may want to grade before you run them through Compressor, because you will lose shadow and highlight information that's basically invisible to the naked eye, but once you apply torque to the footage, will expose banding and artifacts. Delete original media from FCP X library.Import new 4-8gb compound clip(s) back to FCP X.
HOW DO I ADJUST THE VIDEO BITRATE IN SONY VEGAS PRO 11.0 1080P
Render compound clip(s) in Compressor at either 1080p or 4k for sharing with new title and keywords.Send 64gb compound clip(s) to Compressor.Select all new clips, then create compound clip(s) (usually one per event).4k recording at max bitrate (100) - no question here - why would you go with less if it's only temporary?.I'd highly recommend taking a "pre-production" step to store files for the long term, properly labeled and compressed where appropriate. If your final output is 1080p, you can compress your files once you load them on the computer. I know 4K 100M would be ideal, but for a somewhat manageable file size (for me) which of the 2 options would be best? If I'd like my final video file to be 1080P, which would be better to shoot in 1080P 50M or 4K 60M? Ģpass VBR will come closer to those VBR bitrate settings (on those sections that are re-encoded), compared to 1pass VBR.I was just wondering what everyone's thoughts were: Some versions of vegas might need to re-encode the first few frames of some clips depending on how those clips have their GOP arranged. So "using VBR to achieve a certain filesize" doesn't really make any sense unless you are re-encoding the entire thing or the vast majority For example if you put in markers, or other edits. Those bitrate settings only affect if certain frames are re-encoded. You can demux the original to compare the video stream ONLY (no audio, no container, no subs, video ONLY) Transport streams can be 5-10% of the sizeĪn elementary video stream (.m2v) is video only, no container. Different containers can have significant overhead. Has anyone had success with smart rendering?Ĭontainer overhead is the for the program stream (mpg). I even tried adding and exporting the completely untouched MPEG-2 clips just to see if it would smart render, but it still insists on rendering. I tried unchecking the box as Richard_G suggested, but still no change.
HOW DO I ADJUST THE VIDEO BITRATE IN SONY VEGAS PRO 11.0 MOVIE
These are DVD-compliant MPEG-2 clips, so I was really hoping Movie Studio would be able to smart render. I can add text, but it stays there for the entire clip. But DVD Architect doesn't have a text track for video compilations(only audio and video), so I haven't been able to find a way to set a duration for text in DVD Architect. That's why I tried adding subtitles and chapter markers in DVD Architect.
HOW DO I ADJUST THE VIDEO BITRATE IN SONY VEGAS PRO 11.0 HOW TO
I know how to add subtitles in Movie Studio, but Movies Studio insists on rendering the MPEG-2 files. Select a 4-second time range (click and drag) on the timeline, right-click, insert text media ("replace plug-in" with Legacy Text, it may be easier, add, OK), edit and place. When I add text to the video clip, it stays there for the entire clip. Is it possible to add a text track to the timeline in DVD Architect? I'd like to add a few subtitles that last about 4 seconds each, but I don't see a way to set the duration of subtitles.