Frage von kupfi_stanton:Hello,
I made a project that is approximately 15 minutes long, with a video and an audio track.
Premiere Pro for rendering takes hours, but between 1.5 and 2! I habs with WMV9 and DivX tried.
My system:
AMD 64 X2 4400 +
1.5 GB Ram
GeForce 6600GT
Greeting
Antwort von VolkerS:
Etc. Depending on the render settings, used effects. can fit already.
Unfortunately, you wrote to your settings (which is the source material, format, ect.) None
Antwort von kupfi_stanton:
totally forgot ..... also:
Video Effects: none
render settings:
Codec: ISO MPEG-4 Video V1
Passages: 1
Width and Height: 1027 * 768 (a filmed desktop)
frames: 5
Aspect ratio: square. Pixel (1,0)
keyframe interval: 5
Buffer Size: standard
audio: WMA 9.1
Passes: 2
bitrate: Variable
audio format: 48 Kbps, 44 kHz, stereo VBR
Thanks and greetings
Antwort von Nightfly!:
At
... Video Effects: none
...
is synonymous with
...
Width and Height: 1027 * 768 (a filmed desktop)
... not very fast!
What does your CPU utilization?
Gruß,
Nightfly!
Antwort von Markus:
Hello,
one (with a camcorder), has only filmed desktop video resolution, ie 768 × 576 or 720 × 576 (MiniDV). Upscaling brings to light no more details, the picture is still better overall impression.
Antwort von Olya:
I have the output times to 720 × 576 px Added ....... actually went faster! barely an hour!
Wesentl. better than voher:) thx!
Antwort von gutschein:
Hi,
I need even for 18Minuten Film
. 3h33min
Unfortunately for me always synonymous rendered 2 times, so I do not need it, almost 7 hours.
Why is gerrendert actually 2 times?
Can you turn off eventeull it? Hardware
I have a Panasonic NV-GS 280 camcorder.
BAND
PC:
Fujutsu Siemens PC
At about 2.4 Ghz and 650 MB Ram
Software
Premiere Pro 2.0
Question 2
What setting should I take to be rendered, so that the whole quicker. As a result, I'd like an MPEG2 file, so I can later burn to a DVD.
Thanks for your help
Frank
Antwort von Markus:
At least I can say something about this:
Unfortunately for me synonymous always 2 times rendered ... This is called 2-pass encoding. In the first pass, the video is analyzed and compressed in the second round with the 'experience' of the first round.