Dvd Studio Pro Bitrate Error
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enter a title. You can not post a blank message. Please type your message and try again. This discussion is locked mvp productions Level 1 (0 points) Q: Stumped - Video Bit Rate too High Error I just upgraded to FCP 7x and I am trying to dvd studio pro bitrate too high error burn a disc on DV Studio Pro. It runs through the rendering fine, then when
Dvd Studio Pro Video Bitrate Too High Error
it is ready to burn it shuts down and says the video bit rate to high. So I went to the manual and the manual suggested changing the codec to Apple Pro 422, something like that. I did and am now still getting the same error. This has never happened before and I've been using FCP for 6 years. Anybody know what to do or has had a similar problem? I Mac, Mac OS X (10.4.11), none Posted on Aug 26, 2010 8:41 AM I have this question too Close Q: Stumped - Video Bit Rate too High Error All replies Helpful answers by Hal MacLean, Hal MacLean Aug 26, 2010 10:12 AM in response to mvp productions Level 6 (14,790 points) Aug 26, 2010 10:12 AM in response to mvp productions This can be caused be several things, and we need a little more info to sort it out, but as a start:export from FCP through to Compressor and create MPEG2 files and AC3 audio. keep the bitrate of the video no higher than 7.4Mbpskeep the audio bitrate at 192kbps for stereo filesThe error you're getting is not necessarily reporting only the video element, but includes the audio too. Often, using AIFF files (or PCM, WAV etc) raises it too high and you get the error. Use AC3.ProRes files are OK from FCP, but you simply must go to encode them first. DO NOT rely on DVDSPs encoding engine if you want a good job done.Check your preferences in DVDSP - you need to have everything encoded on your disc, and creating menus and adding other graphics means DVDSP has to encode these for you (which is why there is an encoder in there). If the rate peaks even 1 moment over the max (9.8Mbps for video) then you'll get the error. Set your DVDSP encoding settings around 3.5 - 7.4Mbps.Try again! Helpful (0) Reply options Link to this post by Mike Klausmeier, Mike Klausmeier Sep 1, 2010 12:36 PM in response to Hal MacLean Level 1 (9 points) iWork Sep 1, 2010 12:36 PM in response to Hal MacLean Hey. I am having the same prob
Bit Rate Too High If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. Welcome to Mac-Forums! Join us to comment and to customize your site experience! Members have access to different forum appearance options, and many more functions. Results 1 to 3 of 3 Thread: DVD Studio Pro Bit Rate Too High Tweet Thread Tools Show Printable Version Subscribe to this Thread… 05-27-2011,01:06 PM #1 GNO View Profile View Forum Posts Member Since May 27, 2011 Posts 2 DVD Studio Pro Bit Rate Too High I have a project that indicates that https://discussions.apple.com/thread/2557576?tstart=0 the whole file will be 2.9 Gigs when burned to a disk. However in the build process, when muxing track 1 it returns a Bit Rate Too High error. I have done everything I can to lower the Bit Rate in preferences (all the sliders are at the bottom). It is set for a 2 pass. I even tried to divide the (two chapter) project into 1 chapter each so that it would have to burn to 2 disks... To no avail. I http://www.mac-forums.com/showthread.php?t=239602 cannot get rid of the error message. I have dropped in the system and version info below I have been successful in burning many other projects, however this one has me stumped. The video was all prepared with Final Cut Studio and titling with Motion (inserted and edited into Final Cut...) Can someone help? TNX GNO Reply With Quote 05-31-2011,12:22 PM #2 Nethfel View Profile View Forum Posts Member Since Feb 25, 2009 Posts 2,112 Specs:Late 2013 rMBP, i7, 750m gpu, OSX versions 10.9.3, 10.10 Are you encoding the HD or SD? The SD bitrates are fine for a DVD, the HD bitrates would probably cause that complaint as the minimum bitrate is above the limit for an SD DVD (which is about 9.8, above which is commonly known to not playback on DVD players) My Macs: Late 2013 rMBP w/ 750m, 16Gig ram; 2013 Mac Pro 6 core w/ D700, 16Gig Ram; Mac mini G4, 1.25 GHz, 512m ram (server); Late 2011 11" MBA, 1.8GHz i7, 4Gig Ram, 256Gig SSD, HD3000; Powerbook 12" G4 1.33GHz running Linux; Apple TV (1080p version) Reply With Quote 05-31-2011,12:44 PM #3 GNO View Profile View Forum Posts Member Since May 27, 2011 Posts 2 bitrate too high I actually needed to get this on the go... so I went back to the original imported files and re compressed them using the iDVD setting in iSkysoft Video Converter. That seemed to do the trick. However, I have never had to do that before.
> Final Cut Suite DVDSP says "Video Bitrate Too High", but why? Your Name Remember Me? Password Register FAQ Today's Posts Search Final Cut Suite Discussing the editing of all formats with FCS, FCP, FCE Search Forums Show Threads http://www.dvinfo.net/forum/final-cut-suite/117381-dvdsp-says-video-bitrate-too-high-but-why.html Show Posts Advanced Search Search Gallery Advanced Search Go to Page... Page 1 of 2 1 2 > Thread Tools Search this Thread March 19th, 2008, 06:39 PM #1 Mike Barber Major Player Join http://www.creativemac.com/article/Bitrates-in-DVD-Studio-Pro-31809 Date: May 2006 Location: Toronto ON Canada Posts: 731 DVDSP says "Video Bitrate Too High", but why? I've managed to get my multi-angled tracks' GOPs conformed, etc... now I am getting a "Video Bitrate Too High" message dvd studio upon building my DVD. Quote: Compiling VTS#3 (Drills)... Writing VTS_03_0.VOB Muxing VTS_03_1.VOB Video Bitrate Too High The track (track 3) that the error is occurring for has three video streams, all of which were encoded with 2-pass VBR (average=4.7; max=7.0). According to DVDSP's inspector window, the average Bits/Second for the video stream is: V1 = 4,998,041 (or 4.76 Mbps) V2 = 4,994,258 (or 4.76 Mbps) V3 = 5,001,921 (or 4.77 Mbps) There is one audio stream, dvd studio pro a 16-bit/48k AIFF with an average data rate of 1,536,000 bits/second (or 1.46 Mbps) According to the DVDSP (4.1.2 is the version I am using, FYI) user manual, on page 70: Quote: Due to the way the DVD specification requires video streams to be multiplexed together, the number of video streams determines the maximum video bit rate you can use. Following is a list of maximum combined bit rates (highest bit rate video stream + all audio streams + all subtitle streams) you can use for each multi- and mixed-angle track: SD Projects • 5 angles or fewer: 8 Mbps maximum for the track’s combined bit rate • 6–8 angles: 7.5 Mbps maximum for the track’s combined bit rate • 9 angles: 7 Mbps maximum for the track’s combined bit rate HD Projects • 2 to 9 angles: 24 Mbps maximum for the track’s combined bit rate Important: When calculating the combined bit rate for a track, you only need to add in the bit rate of one video stream, but it needs to be the stream with the highest bit rate. Though they are very close, it is my third video stream that is the highest. So V3 + A1 = 4.77 + 1.46 = 6.23 Mbps, leaving me with a 1.77 Mbps margin. What do you think is going on here? ____
Columns Audio Video Interactive Graphics Print Features Downloads Most Viewed Recommended Mac Pro Sites Mac Animation Pro Mac Audio Pro Mac Design Pro Mac DVD Pro Mac Video Pro Final Cut Pro DVD Studio Pro Apple Motion Consumer Electronics DMN Newswire HotLinks for Vendors DMN Links DMN Supplements PrESENTATION Production Animation Shopper Media Kit Contact Webmaster Tutorial: Page (1) of 2 - 04/13/05 email article print page More Related Stories Bitrates in DVD Studio Pro Determining the proper rate for your tracks and reencoding assets By Dave Nagel I get these kinds of questions often: "What's the maximum bitrate I should use in DVD Studio Pro?" "Is a higher bitrate always better?" "Why do I get an error telling me my bitrate is too high?" All of that depends. If you aim too high, you may be setting yourself up for problems later on, ranging from incompatibility with many DVD players to an inability to build your final disc after you've spent all that time preparing it. Either way, the result can cost you time or money. Avoid that hassle by planning your bitrates in advance. For most people, a maximum bitrate seems relevant only when considering whether the content will be able to fit on a disc. That, of course, is easy enough to figure out. But regardless of what fits on a disc, there are still limitations imposed on you by DVD players in general that aren't capable of displaying content beyond a certain bitrate. And the problem isn't just with the video streams in your tracks. It also involves audio streams, multiple angles and even subtitles. We'll take a look at some of the issues involved and cover what you should know before you encode to save yourself time and frustration. And, at the end of this article, I'll show you how to reencode assets that have been processed through DVD Studio Pro's background encoding without having to go in and replace all your assets manually in the event that you get a "Bitrate Too High" error during the build process. Disc capacity When you plan for encoding, you need to be conscious of several factors. The first, of course, is whether your content will fit onto a single disc at any given bitrate. Apple has a formula for determining a maximum bitrate for this concern, which is 560/minutes=max bitrate. So, if your video is 100 minutes, the maximum bitrate would be 560/100=5.6 Mbps. But that's just the video portion, and it doesn't take into account anything else you put on the disc, such as audio, which will cost you another 1.5 Mbps for 16-bit stereo audio (less, of course, for encoded Dolby Digital or DTS audio, depending on your encoding settings). Tha