![]() ![]() Save your work in that fodler you've just created***. ![]() Open DVD Shrink, open the folder DVDA has just created and reauthor it (shrinking menus, main movies or extras - files will be compressed). Minimize DVDA 1 or 2, close the driver, create a new folder*** giving it any name you want. That means DVDA 1 or 2 refuses to burn your project. If your choice is at the end of the first step which is prepare, you'll get a screen saying the dvd project is bigger than the DVD single layer regular size at the same time that the DVD driver opens. How does it work? You open your project with DVDA 1.0 or even 2.0, click choosing or only. It's just neither Magix nor Sony before them seem to have had any interest in providing a GPU enabled render template for those of us who work with Blu-ray a lot.If your project is bigger than the regular DVD single layer size, you can always use DVD Shrink (freeware, you can fid it at to shrink (compress) whatever you want (for instance, menus, extras or main movies). So apart from the recompression issue in DVDA Magix AVC is to be avoided if you're burning to Blu-ray. Objects moving across the screen were plagued by jittery movement to the point where they were unwatchable. The results of the Magix AVC NVENC enabled render templates were pretty horrible. I have since had a look at the Blu-ray tests that I did on my standalone player and TV. When I wrote the OP in this thread I was very much focused on what my new machine and Vegas Pro 15 could do, and I hadn't really paid much attention to the ouput (in my case the finished Blu-ray discs). ![]() I wrote to Magix technical support on the issue, and the reply I got can only be described as unsatisfactory, mainly consisting of a lesson in the basics of using DVDA - all of which I already knew. Is it a bug or by design that Magix AVC Blu-ray video streams aren't accepted by DVDA without recompression? I was hoping someone from Magix would comment on this as it isn't what the user expects. As far as I can see the Magix templates are the only ones that support GPU rendering. So, I'm wondering if there is any way to adjust things so that I can use the Magix AVC templates that won't require Vegas DVD Architect to recompress my AVC files? I've got a feeling that the answer will be "No" but I have to ask anyway. So, as the test times below show, if the goal is to make Blu-rays its actually faster to use the slower Sony AVC template. When I burned it to Blu-ray Vegas DVD Architect insisted on recompressing the AVC file. You can imagine my joy when I rendered the same project with a Magix AVC NVENC enabled template and it ripped through it in just 25 minutes 28 seconds!!!Īlas, my joy was short lived. For example a project of 1 hour 23 minutes that took approximately 1 hour 40 minutes to render with a Sony AVC render template now renders in just 1 hour 5 minutes. Overall I'm reasonably pleased with the improved performance from my old rig. In the main I use Vegas to render AVC files for burning to Blu-ray in DVD Architect. My new machine is Win 10 Pro 64 bit, Intel i7-7820X CPU overclocked to 4.5GHz, 32 Gigs Ram, Nvidia GeForce GTX 1070 Ti graphics card. Previously I was on Vegas Pro 13 and DVD Architect Pro 6. I've just got a new PC and upgraded to Vegas Pro 15 and Vegas DVD Architect. ![]()
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