Forum Replies Created

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  • Jason Brown

    March 28, 2013 at 9:14 pm in reply to: Dropped Frames During Render

    The system GPU Ram is low compared to high end cards — 1024MB NVIDIA GeForce GT 650MT built in card.

    Resolution is 1920×1080. All footage is 10 bit ProRes 4444.

  • Jason Brown

    March 28, 2013 at 9:11 pm in reply to: Dropped Frames During Render

    Thank you very much for the reply. This sounds like the right cause for the the frame drops. I have late 2012 2.7Ghz Intel Core i7 with 16GB Ram. Graphics specs are NVIDIA GeForce GT 650M 1024 MB

    I’m using the Black Magic Ultra 3D Studio playback box.

    Are you aware of any work around if indeed the GPU Ram is causing the dropouts? I did a render at 2 frames per second, but still got a few dropouts. I am unable to upgrade the graphics card, and on a time sensitive project.

    My recent thought was to go through and manually mark shots that have dropouts and re-render individual problem shots. Then assemble a final in Avid Media Composer.

    thanks again

  • Jason Brown

    March 28, 2013 at 8:39 pm in reply to: Dropped Frames During Render

    The frames are random each time. I can see the frame drops in the Resolve viewer window as its rendering. This is what leads me to believe it may be software releated, but DaVinci support does not have an answer. They felt it may be hard drive related, but I experience no issues with other video software rendering. I’ve also tried using separate high speed drives for read and write.

  • Thank you for your reply. I am hesitant to transcode out of Resolve to DNXHD 444, as my source media is ProRes 4444. I had been planning on exporting a single master clip from Resolve for text/title additions and audio tracks to avoid double compressing. However, the flexibility of relinking all clips in the Avid project is very tempting.

  • Jason Brown

    March 24, 2013 at 2:30 am in reply to: Export Workflow – Avoiding Quality Loss

    Thanks for your reply. Delivery will be digital cinema. My Avid system won’t handle DPX playback and I still need to sync up final audio mix, add text, and slide around a handful of shots. My initial thought was to export the graded timeline from Resolve as ProRes 444, than reimport into Media Composer, do my final work, then export a master from Avid. Would you say this sounds like a logical work flow? I just want to be sure I won’t be degrading the image quality beyond what is unavoidable.

  • Jason Brown

    March 18, 2013 at 11:11 pm in reply to: When Split Clip manually Clip node affects all clips?

    Issue resolved — in the color timeline, select the clip and right click. Enable “use local grades”.

  • Jason Brown

    March 18, 2013 at 10:51 pm in reply to: When Split Clip manually Clip node affects all clips?

    I am also searching for this in version 9. Any luck finding how to batch unlink split clips?

  • Jason Brown

    March 18, 2013 at 5:57 am in reply to: Title cards jumping when exported to Quicktime.

    I was able to solve this issue by not using “same as source” QT export, but using “custom” instead. All custom settings were left the same as the source media, so I don’t believe there should be any degradation in image quality.

  • Jason Brown

    March 17, 2013 at 11:45 pm in reply to: Turn off embedded Audio?

    Yes, you are right. Some of the design of version 9 was different, but I figured it out. Embedded audio does deactivate automatically when chase track is activated.

    thank you for your reply.

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