I'm currently using Xvid4PSP on Windows 8. It wasn't even a week ago I had conversion speeds of 20-25 fps. Now it's 3-6, maybe 10 if I'm lucky running other processes in the background.
I'm converting television shows from MKV to AVI. It's always the same settings, but my conversion speeds just dropped. I reckon it had started prior to me attempting to manually set a higher priority on the conversion through task manager.
I'm going to try other converters, but I'm adding sub titles. Only a few programs even allow them, otherwise it's a daunting process I'm not willing to really go through. :/
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 8 of 8
-
-
I had conversion speeds of 20-25 fps. Now it's 3-6, maybe 10
-
I've used the same settings, and I haven't updated anything.
My computer is exactly the same as it once was. It just randomly decided to slow itself.
However, prior to it starting to slow, I manually changed it's priority from Above Normal to High.
I don't believe it helped me, and after that conversion ended and I picked up another some time later... it was really slow. :C -
I've used the same settings, and I haven't updated anything.
My computer is exactly the same as it once was.
Meanwhile I am getting busy in my backyard with our new guests to see if they need anything to be served well. -
I would start by downloading and installing Process Explorer from http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb896653.aspx. Then, without running XviD4PSP, I'd look for processes other than "Sytem Idle Process"" taking up a lot of CPU cycles. (When the system is idle, "Sytem Idle Process" will normally consume the largest percentage of CPU cycles. That is what is supposed to happen. ) Next do a search to find out what they are and why they might be running. You do not want to kill processes that should be running and are acting as they should.
-
You might check whether your disk has switched from DMA mode to PIO (much slower). This apparently sometimes happens due to a hardware failure. It still runs, just much slower. Sorry, but I don't recall offhand how to do that, but I'm sure someone else will.
-
Yeah, that's the first thing I thought too. I'm on XP, and it's in Device Manager. Find the hard drive and check the Mode. One way is to right-click on My Computer and hit Properties. Hit the Hardware tab and then Device Manager. Then IDE ATA/ATAPI Controllers. Double-Click Primary IDE Channel->Advanced Settings->Transfer Mode. Or whatever it is for your computer. Just look around for something being in PIO Mode and change it.
-
When it does that it usually kicks your CPU down also. You can run CPU-Z to check your multiplier and core speed. If it's lower than it's supposed to be then you'll need to go into BIOS and fix it. I used to shut off all the error reporting in XP and I used a bat file that kept Windows from shutting things down. I think by default if it defects ten errors then it shuts stuff down to protect the system and it can be anything from a failed burn to who knows what. You can turn off Dr Watson which causes a lot of problems and turn off error reporting that wants to contact Microsoft every single time there's a glitch in a program.
Similar Threads
-
Increase the C size
By alintatoc in forum ComputerReplies: 12Last Post: 28th Oct 2012, 20:23 -
Why Handbrake and FFmpeg MP4/x.264 conversion speeds are so different?
By falco2000 in forum Video ConversionReplies: 4Last Post: 30th Sep 2012, 09:10 -
Bad quality WMV - will a conversion increase quality?
By nickbrace in forum Video ConversionReplies: 4Last Post: 20th Oct 2011, 04:48 -
Write Speeds - anything new?
By Mike99 in forum MediaReplies: 22Last Post: 10th Feb 2009, 19:41 -
Burning speeds
By Rogert in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 2Last Post: 1st Sep 2008, 07:28