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  • Sony Vegas Rendering Error

    Posted by Alfie Gale on February 6, 2011 at 7:38 pm

    Hey folks,

    Just spent a few hours editing a film on the my Windows 7 HP 64 bit PC using Sony Vegas Home Premium 9. I have just received this error when I went to render after about 3%:

    ”Version 9.0c (Build 30)
    Exception 0xC0000005 (access violation) READ:0x0 IP:0x71B6500A
    In Module ‘MSVCR80.dll’ at Address 0x71B50000 + 0x1500A
    Thread: ProgMan ID=0x112C Stack=0x63FF000-0x6400000
    Registers:
    EAX=002a3000 CS=0023 EIP=71b6500a EFLGS=00010212
    EBX=00000000 SS=002b ESP=063ff4ec EBP=063ff4f4
    ECX=000a8c00 DS=002b ESI=00000000 FS=0053
    EDX=00000000 ES=002b EDI=7e9400a8 GS=002b
    Bytes at CS:EIP:
    71B6500A: F3 A5 FF 24 95 24 51 B6 …: 71 90 8B C7 BA 03 00 00 q…….
    Stack Dump:
    063FF4EC: 00000000
    063FF4F0: 5C1B4BF8 5BDC0000 + 3F4BF8
    063FF4F4: 063FF868 06300000 + FF868
    063FF4F8: 10B774FA 10B60000 + 174FA (wmfplug4.dll)
    063FF4FC: 7E9400A8 7E940000 + A8
    063FF500: 00000000”

    Does this mean anything to anybody? Can anyone help me out?

    Many thanks,

    Alfie

    John Rofrano replied 15 years, 4 months ago 3 Members · 4 Replies
  • 4 Replies
  • Stephen Mann

    February 7, 2011 at 2:57 am

    Everything after “access violation” is of value only to the original programmer, and then only in controlled conditions.

    We have all seen access violations occur since we took ownership of our first x86 PC’s. The infamous “Bluescreen”, application crashes, it doesn’t really matter, access violations are all over the place. For any of you that remember the good old Windows 9x days, a General Protection Fault and Invalid Page Fault are basically the same thing (and a segmentation fault too). To many people, the phrase ‘access violation’ is synonymous with “crash”. But what exactly is an access violation?

    To put it simply, an access violation occurs any time an area of memory is accessed that the program doesn’t have permission to access. This can be due to bad code, faulty RAM or even a bad device driver. It really doesn’t matter who the culprit is, the root issue is the same.

    The free program: Prime95, available at https://files.extremeoverclocking.com/file.php?f=103 will torture test your PC. If you have bad RAM or a heat sensitive component, this program will find it. While you may not be overclocking, Vegas is very processor intensive – more than Premiere. If you have a PC on the edge of stability, Prime95 will push your PC hard. If you can run Prime95 for an hour, then your PC is probably not the problem.

    If you have a problem driver, I recommend running Driver Detective from https://www.drivershq.com/ (Actually a good plan is to run Driver Detective periodically. I doesn’t do anything to your installed drivers unless you tell it to.)

    Steve Mann
    MannMade Digital Video
    http://www.mmdv.com

  • John Rofrano

    February 7, 2011 at 1:48 pm

    [Alfie Gale] “using Sony Vegas Home Premium 9.”

    There is no product called “Sony Vegas Home Premium 9”. There is Vegas Movie Studio Platinum 9 but the latest version is 9.0b and your dump says it’s 9.0c which is very confusing. If you do have Movie Studio Platinum 9 how did you get a 9.0c version?

    Are you sure you don’t have Vegas Pro 9? The latest version of that is 9.0e. In either case, make sure that you are running the latest version. This may be a problem that has already been fixed.

    ~jr

    http://www.johnrofrano.com
    http://www.vasst.com

  • Alfie Gale

    February 7, 2011 at 5:03 pm

    Very sorry.

    I’m using Sony Vegas Movie Studio 9.

  • John Rofrano

    February 8, 2011 at 12:07 am

    [Alfie Gale] “I’m using Sony Vegas Movie Studio 9.”

    Yea, that’s what’s confusing. According to the Sony site the latest copy of Movie Studio 9 is 9.0b yet your error dump says “‘Version 9.0c (Build 30)”. Very strange.

    ~jr

    http://www.johnrofrano.com
    http://www.vasst.com

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