Hi,
I'm using VPX6, version 13.0.5.9.
I have a 2 movie project, 50 + 27 minutes, all 1920x1080 that I burned 2 months ago and it took about 2-3 hours to encode the files for DVD NTSC 720x480, 29.97fps, and the quality was good. Burning afterwards worked fine.
I subsequently added in NeatVideo effects on most of the clips, and stabilized a few more short clips using proDAD Mercalli 2.0 (not many are stabilized as I used a tripod for most of the shots).
I reburned (encoded to disk only) using the same burn parameters. This time, encoding took about 60 hours, and the result was that in many clips where people move, the image is juddery. See the comparison below. I imported a small part of one of the VOB files for this. The original is actually a range exported to mxv at the high resolution 1920x1080. Note the difference. I also tested an export to mxv at 720x480 and there was no difference - the result was not juddery. Exporting to mxv took 3m28s for a 12s19f clip, which I find is a lot.
I burned the encoded files to DVD quickly and with no problems. Of course, the result was as shown in the VOB files.
The clip in both cases has NeatVideo applied.
I opened a previous version without NeatVideo on the clip in question and it exported the clip of about 13s in 13s to mxv at 720x480, fast, fast, fast.
My conclusion is that it is NeatVideo that is causing the tremendous slow down. However, I don't have an explanation for the juddery VOB file, other than NeatVideo. But since it exports to wmv and mxv ok, then it should also encode properly, at least I think that it should.
I encoded to files on external HD, images on C: drive and videos on second HD. For the encoding process, I turned off everything that I could, disconnected from internet, and turned off Virus and Firewall software. I noticed that CPU usage oscillated mostly from 50 to 65%.
1. Does anyone have a solution to decrease the export speed with Neat Video effects on the clips?
2. Does anyone have a potential solution for the juddery DVD VOB files? (Other than exporting to mxv, reimporting, then burning.)
Thanks,
John
Computer:
Intel i7 860 @ 2.80GHz, 16GB Ram, 64 bit
Windows 7 Home Premium
Settings for VPX6
Burn/encode parameters