Creative Communities of the World Forums

The peer to peer support community for media production professionals.

Activity Forums Adobe Premiere Pro Uncompressed YUV 10bit avi

  • Uncompressed YUV 10bit avi

    Posted by Danielj on February 11, 2007 at 4:59 pm

    I am using a Toshiba Laptop 3.6 ghz. 1 gig dual channel ram. 80 gig hd. 128 ati radeon 9600.
    I have recently made the leap to HDV. my project settings are the HDV settings 1080i 30
    I have been attempting to export out of premiere pro and after effects to an external harddrive using the uncompressed YUV 10bit.
    The problem i am encountering is once the file hits 4 gigs i get a message saying my disk is full. It is nowhere near full. over 100 gigs free.
    This happens out of both premiere and after effects.
    Don’t quite have the cash yet to pick up the cineform codecs.
    The uncompressed YUV quality seems to be the best so far. Any ideas about why I am getting these error messages and how to fix the problem.
    Anyone?

    Jim Leonard replied 19 years, 3 months ago 7 Members · 10 Replies
  • 10 Replies
  • Dave Friend

    February 11, 2007 at 6:40 pm

    Is the drive formatted as NTSF?

  • Danielj

    February 11, 2007 at 7:04 pm

    no its Fat32. I do have another external drive that is should i use it?

  • Blast1

    February 11, 2007 at 8:00 pm

    Reformat the drive to NTFS.

  • Frédéric

    February 11, 2007 at 8:01 pm

    hi, there is 4 gig export limit out of ppro (i don’t know about after effcts), had the same problem trying to export a quicktime…

  • Frédéric

    February 11, 2007 at 8:04 pm

    there was a post bbout this issue
    https://forums.creativecow.net/readpost/3/870218?

  • Danielj

    February 11, 2007 at 8:11 pm

    Hmmmm
    Thanks will reformat and try. However i have a sneaking suspicion about the 4 gig limit.

  • Harm Millaard

    February 11, 2007 at 10:20 pm

    Can you explain with a HD of 80 GB’s how you manage to have over 100 GB’s free? That is a trick I want to learn. It will solve all of my storage problems.

  • Harm Millaard

    February 11, 2007 at 10:44 pm

    Sorry, reread your post and figured it out, the external drive. Guess you don’t have the magic trick to solve my storage problems after all….

  • Vince Becquiot

    February 12, 2007 at 4:43 am

    The 4 gig limit (other than on a FAT 32) only relates to some Quicktime codecs, but never to AVI’s.

    Vince

  • Jim Leonard

    February 14, 2007 at 6:48 am

    That’s your problem. FAT32 is limited to 4GB per file. Conver to NTFS (you can do this without losing data).

    Why is that drive FAT32 anyway? Did you format it that way?

We use anonymous cookies to give you the best experience we can.
Our Privacy policy | GDPR Policy