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Activity Forums Adobe Premiere Pro Export to DVD results in video/audio that is choppy… Any advice?

  • Export to DVD results in video/audio that is choppy… Any advice?

    Posted by Nicoroza on May 10, 2006 at 3:45 pm

    I have attempted to export a project I created in Adobe Premiere Pro 1.5 to DVD. I finally created the DVD (after about 2 hours) only to find the playback on the DVD is choppy. The project looks PERFECT before I export it. I’ve tried alot of the settings for the export but cannot get it to export clean. When you watch the video, it plays along for several seconds then freezes for about 1/4 second then starts back up. It does this about about 50 times in the 12 minute video and is driving me crazy. Any ideas would help, Thanks!

    Nicoroza replied 20 years ago 3 Members · 6 Replies
  • 6 Replies
  • Steven L. gotz

    May 10, 2006 at 8:20 pm

    What are your output settings. It sounds like you may have gone too high on the data rate.

    Steven
    https://www.stevengotz.com

  • J

    May 11, 2006 at 5:45 am

    I’m having a similar problem. I’ve burnt an avi to DVD on Ulead DVD workshop and Pinnacle Expression and with both I am getting snap crackles and pops in my audio and freezing, pixels and jumps with my image…

    If I play back the .avi on windows and in my timeline, flawless..

    I’ve been using -R Dvd’s, so I’m going to try +R tomorrow after I pick up a spindle. But I have a feeling that won’t solve this problem, and my composer is awaiting a dvd copy. I’m stuck, I have recently upgraded to PP2, and this is my first attempt at burning a DVD. I never ever had this problem with 1 or 1.5…

    I have outputted 3 nights in a row, trying Lower Field First, de-interlace, Data rate Recompress “Maintain Data rate” I’ve clicked recompress off

    I am stumped, and nothing in 2.0 has stumped me for 3 straight days. If the +R doesn’t make a difference, which it probably won’t, my next move will be outputting to a DV tape and have a post facility do it for $150, which at this point, is looking quite cheap in comparison to the time I am wasting and the amount of visine for the red eye trying to figure out this paradox. How does an avi play flawlessly on WMP and then just find a way to screw up in authoring…

    Never in my 5 years working with premiere has this ever happened to me…

  • Steven L. gotz

    May 11, 2006 at 1:56 pm

    Have you use the Audio Mixer to check to make sure your audio never, ever, exceeds 0dB.

    Steven
    https://www.stevengotz.com

  • J

    May 11, 2006 at 2:08 pm

    I have yes, I even get the snaps and crackles during my titles which have no sound. I have played it through 10 times and never get into the red with my mixer. In the past, when that happens, its always evident in playback on windows media player anyways.

    Like the person who started this thread, my outputted project plays flawless until I burn it to DVD. I went to Premiere Pro Help and there is a note saying if you have a “Daul layer DVD” you should burn on +R…I have a dual layer, so this actually might be the problem.

    I’m off to work, then to pick up some +R Dvd’s and I’ll let you know if this solved my problem.

  • J

    May 12, 2006 at 3:48 am

    Solved my problem, hope it solves yours…

    +R

  • Nicoroza

    May 16, 2006 at 3:43 am

    Okay, got this thing resolved. I upgraded to an SATA DVD burner. I can’t tell much improvement in speed but the video comes out crisp with no choppyness what-so-ever.

    Thanks all for your help!

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