Frage von samson54:Hello,
I'm new here and have been recently detected a problem with my record Leadtek WinFast 2000 Expert / analog TV card. If I were a TV recording on the composite input do they always stops very briefly and then makes a quick leap, but then some frames are skipped, so totally choppy, which then goes to the entire recording so synonymous in the preview mode . Up until about 1 months everything went flawlessly, I have, however, some hardware s.der changed. There is no preference which synonymous capture software I use, whether of Leadtek, Movie Maker or NeroVision Virtual Dub 1.7.7, it is always the same. And I noticed is if I have Virtual Dub in the preview mode that can be seen in the bar where the set 25 fps are displayed, right next to the present, only 22-23 Fps Fps is why go to two to three Pictures always lost?
Here is my system: Intel C2D E6750, Board Gigabyte-P35C-DS3R, 4 GB RAM, graphics GF 8800 GTS 512MB, HDD Samsung SpinPoint 250 GB, Monitor Lenovo 22 "Wide.
Since the Leadtek card (approx. 5 years old) a bit on in years has come, I übelegt, possibly a new digital TV card to buy, this would solve my problems?
It would be nice if someone could help me.
Antwort von steveb:
I would first start, all running task (not needed) off / stop. How does the CPU utilization rate for the recordings from? Any antivirus / spam software that is running?
Is there perhaps an IRQ sharing problem? Latest Drivers in use? Or perhaps it is the most recent driver errors?
hard drive is full or fragmented?
Antwort von Quadruplex:
I übelegt, possibly a new digital TV card to buy, this would solve my problems? The quality point of view is in any case useful. But that does not guarantee against stock shots. As already been described: Check on your calculator in the background running processes. Norton, for instance, is a real brake - but synonymous Windows XP starts s.Werk stuff, what you do not need.
Antwort von MisterSteel:
Hello samson54,
the tips of steveb and Quadruplex help you safely to your calculator stable and somewhat leaner to make - but do not solve your problem.
I guess without a cheeky look: My TV card is in the PCI bus. Right? Yep ;-)
The problem with all 32-bit operating systems (eg synonymous Windows XP) is that the address space of 4GB RAM is not fully addressed, since the upper part of the address for the PCI card is needed. If you use XP, then economic synonymous You already have noticed that you only 3.2 .. 3.5 GB of RAM available. The rest you can never achieve (or just with general, unknown to me tricks).
Solution 1: Even if it hurts, take 'away 1GB RAM (2GB or if it's because his needs). Then funzt the back! Try it times out!
Solution 2: Change to a 64-bit Windows. This may be the address space of 4GB address completely synonymous and the PCI card should play again. The problem is it only that it will be other problems, as many drivers for the 64bit versions are not available. Probably true synonymous your TV card.
Solution 3: install a 64bit operating system (Windows ok, but better would be a Linux like Ubuntu AMD64 for AMD and Intel processors) in parallel with your 32bit installation (dual boot with boot manager). In the 64-bit environment (which you then synonymous keep it very lean), the TV card addressed and recorded. In the 32-bit environment, you can then edit as usual. Advantage: The old neighborhood has not changed, you need a little space on the hard drive (or better, a second plate for the other operating system).
For me, the ideal variant 3 (= 32bit and Win XP Prof 64bit = AMD64 Ubuntu Linux). I can so the whole address space in the 64-bit environment, then the films and record in the 32-bit environment as usual editing. Linux also has the advantage that it effectively bypasses with the resources and man next to the TV Studio loosely additional things can be.
I hope this helps :-)
Mr.Steel