I had ripped a bunch of my favorite scenes from some of my dvds to .avi files. When I go to import them into Vegas to do some further editing, they do not show up. It only has an audio stream. I know the files were there as I had been able to view them earlier. But ever since I did a reinstall of Windows XP, no luck. Any ideas? Thanks.
Jeff
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 16 of 16
-
-
It should do I have compiled a movie with it that has .avi .wmv. and .mpeg formats altogether
unless its some codec issue or some bizzarre thing
a simple trick if the file is large etc i often use windows movie maker to convert a large avi or mpeg to a wmv movie file
this reduces things from like 70 meg clips right down to under a meg
not much quality loss etc - but again depends on what its being used for etc
but in general an avi should be ok for vegas -
it would help to know what type of avi file it is as there are some 50 types
"Each problem that I solved became a rule which served afterwards to solve other problems." - Rene Descartes (1596-1650) -
I'll have to see what type of .avi they are. I'm thinking they were Divx.
When ripping a dvd for further editing, what is the best format to rip to then? Thanks.
Jeff -
Unless you must use particular effects in Vegas, you should consider a dedicated mpeg2 editor such as Womble Mpeg Wizard. Vegas will import mpeg2 and work with it, however it expands the video to the timeline. This means you must re-encode all of it, even if the changes are minor. Dedicated mpeg editors will only re-encode what has changed, preserving the quality of the original where ever possible, and are also a lot faster because they have less work to do.
I love Vegas, but I don't use it to cut the ads out of my digital streams because it simply isn't the best tool for the job. The same goes for DVD editing.Read my blog here.
-
Gunslinger, thanks for the advice. I will consider that for sure.
That brings up a question. So when I import video from my Sony HC1 to my pc using firewire, I believe it automatically makes it an mpeg 2. So does that mean whenever I import that into Vegas for editing, then render, I am losing quality?
Jeff -
Thanks Ed. But as Gunslinger mentioned, I have noticed that even if I make very minor edits, it still takes a very long time to render. I suppose there is no workaround to that is there?
-
Originally Posted by Jeff_NJ
HDV has 15 frame GOPS. Those frames need construction unless you edit only on I frames. -
Ed, to be honest, I usually don't go back to HDV. Not yet at least. I usually render as DV widescreen. I usually will shoot in HD, but am not able to burn HD projects yet. But sometimes I will shoot in DV mode, and even then it still takes a fairly long time to render a video. Although I suppose that is dependent on my bit rate settings.
Jeff -
Originally Posted by Jeff_NJ
HDV can be cuts edited in Vegas without huge recodes. Output to DV format is a completely different story. The output must be downsized from 1440x1080i to 720x480i and converted from MPeg to DV. That takes a lot of processing. -
Ed, yeah sorry the thread has gotten a bit off track. My original problem was not being able to view .avi files in Vegas 7. I will try GSpot and see if I can identify what codecs might be missing.
Someone then brought up that I should try womble for mpeg editing saying that it is faster than a program such as Vegas. So I was just wondering about that.
I was wondering why is it that I can import an mpeg 2 into vegas, make some basic edits, export as an mpeg 2, but it still takes a long time to render.
You answered my question though.. occasionally I have gone from HD and rendered as DV and that is where the processing comes in. Now I usually just shoot in DV if its going to be a DV project. I had thought the HD would prove to be higher quality even when rendering to DV.
Confused? LOL.. I know I am. Thanks for your help.
Jeff -
Originally Posted by Jeff_NJ
DV to DV works flawlessly. HDV to HDV seems to recode audio every time for me. It must be a setting in preferences.
Womble MPeg editing takes one file in fixed format and cuts on that. It isn't a general multi-format tool like Vegas so can be more streamlined. -
Thanks for explaining that Ed. Makes sense. So I guess my problem had been going from HD to DV.
Now I just need to sort out my .avi problem. Codecs.
Jeff
Similar Threads
-
Vegas Movie Studio HD 9.0 and Importing .avi files.
By empressofbees in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 3Last Post: 17th Jan 2012, 16:45 -
How to Import Matrox AVI Files into Vegas Pro 8
By SCDVD in forum EditingReplies: 1Last Post: 22nd Mar 2009, 19:57 -
Using Matrox .avi files in Vegas Pro 8
By SCDVD in forum EditingReplies: 1Last Post: 20th Mar 2009, 15:43 -
Import Matrox AVI files into Vegas Pro 8?
By SCDVD in forum EditingReplies: 2Last Post: 5th Mar 2009, 17:34 -
AVI files in SONY VEGAS
By thompskm in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 1Last Post: 30th May 2007, 05:44