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Activity Forums Adobe Premiere Pro Problems creating an ISO file in PP 2.0

  • Problems creating an ISO file in PP 2.0

    Posted by Diamond84 on November 15, 2007 at 10:20 am

    Hi,

    I’m trying to encode a 2 hour video clip into an ISO file, but keep receiving an error message saying that there’s ‘insufficient space’ on my hard drive.

    I have 90GB of free space, which I would have thought would be enough to encode the data? The file system is NTFS.

    Just thought I see if anyone else had come across this problem before or if anyone had any ideas about what the issues might be??

    Cheers!

    Blast1 replied 18 years, 6 months ago 4 Members · 4 Replies
  • 4 Replies
  • Mike Velte

    November 15, 2007 at 11:48 am

    Most file types cannot exceed 4 GB. The exception is Open DML video codecs like DirectShow and Mpeg 2 plus a few more.
    The maximum file size for a VIDEO_TS folder is limited only by the capacity of the disc as the largest file inside is 1 GB.
    Someone correct me as I am getting old.

  • Jon Barrie

    November 15, 2007 at 12:19 pm

    I’m pretty sure I’ve got many a video clip here that exceeds the 4gig limit you speak of mike. Actually I’m looking at an recoded vob file to dv.avi that is 12Gig. The NTFS file structure allows you to have massive file sizes unlike the older FAT & FAT32 file structures. Size shouldn’t really be the issue… 😉
    How are you making the ISO? Why ISO? What’s it for? If it is a DVD ISO then do it from EncoreDVD. It should come out fine. I have done ISOs from PPro2 before but not 2hrs long. Try EncoreDVD.
    Let me know how it turns out.
    – Hey mike.

  • Mike Velte

    November 16, 2007 at 11:19 am

    [Jon Barrie] “recoded vob file to dv.avi that is 12Gig”

    Yes, that is an Open DML DirectShow video file.

  • Blast1

    November 17, 2007 at 5:26 am

    Its been a while but I think the ISO9600 spec was a 4gig limit, but DVDs are supposed to use UDF/ISO9600 which doesn’t have the limit, what I would look for is where the “Media Cache” and “Media Encoding” scratch disks are setup and make sure they have enough room

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