"Stutters" or glitches in video during project playback
Product: Flyer
Platforms: 2000 3000 3000T 4000 4000T
Possible causes and solutions:
1) Use of odd framelengths for FlyerStills or video clips. The
Flyer works entirely on the color-frame, which is composed
of four fields of video, or two regular frames. When you set
in and out points using the sliders or the arrow gadgets on
the control panel, you are automatically moving in
color-frame increments. If you type in the in and out-points,
you may inadvertently split a color frame at the start or
end of the edit. The Oz routine FixJitter will analyze a
sequence that is having problems, and will reset in and out
points to eliminate split color-frames.
2) Sequence uses several digital-on effects in a row, or
several digital-off effects in a row. Here is the
long explanation (quoted from documentation):
In order to perform digital effects such
as the kind where the entire picture
image is flown off screen the Toaster must
convert the incoming video signal to a
digital display, then fly this "digitized"
version of the video off the screen. The
digital version of the incoming video is in
fact slightly behind the original incoming
video, delayed by 1/30th of a second.
There are essentially two types of digital
effects: (1) those that fly digitized video
off the screen (revealing the preview video
source in the background), and (2) those
that fly digitized video on the screen
(covering up the current video source). We
call these digital on" and "digital off"
effects. The Toaster has only one digital
channel, so the digital signal may be on
either the Main bus or the Preview bus at
any given time. If the digital channel is
routed through one bus when your sequence
calls for a digital effect on the other bus,
the Switcher must instantaneously switch the
digital channel the moment before the effect
can run. This switch is instantaneous, but
the fact that the video signal has now jumped
in time (by 1/30th of a second) causes the
alert viewer to see a stutter in the video
signal.
In live video production situations, you can
exercise a degree of control over which bus
(main or preview) is the current
"digital bus" by correct operation of the
Switcher alone (using a combination of the
bus buttons and the Freeze/Live buttons). You
can also choose the type of digital effect that
makes the best use of the current location of
the digital channel (i.e., a "digital on" effect
when the preview bus is digital, or a "digital off"
effect when the main bus is digital).
When sequencing video projects with the Flyer,
this can be a bit tougher.
You'll need to pay attention to your use of digital
effects when editing a project (this means all of the
effects in the Digital and Trajectories folders). If
you do wish to use them, try to make use of them in
the following ways:
When you use a "digital on" effect to bring a clip to
the screen, take the same clip off the screen with a
"digital off" effect. This lets you avoid a stutter.
After using a "digital on" effect for one video clip,
allow another video clip to occur (using any type of
transition other than a digital one) before using
another "digital on" effect. The switch from the
digital clip to the non digital one will turn the
digital channel back off, so that you can use another
"digital on" effect without danger of stutter. (Avoid
back-to-back "digital on" effects, however.)
Avoid the use of "digital off" effects with video
clips. Only use "digital off" effects with Flyer Stills
and Framestores. Currently, there is no way to set the
main bus to its digital state in preparation for a
"digital off" effect (except by using a "digital on"
effect).
3) Clip or still is on too short a time for next effect to
load. This will usually produce an error message in 4.1
version Flyer software, but often produced a glitch in
earlier versions, with no resulting error message. You
need to either shorten the duration of the effect, or
lengthen the clip or still ahead of the effect.
Note: The speed of your Amiga drive controller and your
Amiga system hard drive are important factors in the
loading time of effects. With faster loading times, you
can get away with shorter clip or still segments in a
sequence. With a slow drive and controller, you will
be restricted in how short a time you can display a
clip or still and be able to use a transition effect,
as opposed to a cut.
4) Noise on the SCSI bus. This will cause the Flyer to have
to make several attempts at loading the data in order to
get a successful load. The Flyer will redisplay earlier
data when this happens, causing material to appear out of
sequence.
Causes of noise can be bad cabling, bad connectors, or ground
loops in the equipment in the video suite. Thoroughly
check cabling, and eliminate any ground loops. See also:
Ground Loops.
5) Project is accessing directories which exceed the current
limitation of about 180 files in a Flyer drive directory.
This is a known bug which the product team is working to
resolve. The workaround is to divide project materials
into folders such that no folder contains more than about
150 files.
This can also produce audio stuttering, even when it is the
video drives which have the overloaded directories. Project
elements may also be displayed out of sequence.
6) A clip may be corrupt. Corrupt clips may induce stuttering
in project playback, and the stuttering may not appear at
the corrupt clip, but rather may show up later in the project
sequence.
A corrupt video clip will usually be detectable if you use the
in and out point sliders to scrub through the clip. An entire
field may be missing or damaged (chroma is missing, or the
field is just noise, or just a portion may show a fault (a
horizontal bar where chroma is missing, or noise has replaced
the image). Such a clip must be deleted from the drive, and
redigitized from the original source footage.
The file system on a Flyer drive may also go corrupt, and if
so, the drive must be reformatted. Keep clips only if you are
completely certain they are not corrupt. When in doubt,
delete, because one corrupt clip can corrupt the entire drive.
If all other potential problems have been eliminated, and you
have a sequence which displays video stills or clips, or even
more peculiar, segments of the video clips used, out of order
and in seemingly random fashion, then it is likely that one
of the Flyer drives has a corrupt file structure.
Note: if the audio "clips" during recording (exceeds the
acceptable input volume level, as shown in the level meters
on the Record panel), the resulting audio or video clip is
actually corrupt, and must be deleted and redigitized. This
may not produce a visible or easily audible defect in the
resulting video or audio clip, but will cause problems in
project playback, in both video and audio. You must watch
the audio level meters when recording, and make sure that
the clipping indicator never lights up.
7) Drive fails to transfer data at the rate required by the
video clip. This is usually detected by the Flyer in the
current version software, but some earlier versions did
not detect it. The causes may be:
-a long idle time due to a thermal calibration (T-Cal) or
other drive problem. Drives should be re-tested periodically
to see that idle times, which can be an early trouble
indicator, remain within acceptable Flyer performance
tolerances. Statistically, even a drive that operates
well within tolerance can occasionally have a long
timeout. When this happens, just retry the recording;
-the user recorded in a mode the drive cannot support,
i.e. the drive is only capable of standard mode recording,
and the user has attempted to record in HQ5. The clip
must be re-digitized in the proper mode.
-the clip was recorded to a portion of the drive which does
not support the required data transfer rate. This will
happen if the drive was not short-stroked for the highest
recording mode which the user requires. Note that if
the drive is not short-stroked, then a clip may be directly
playable, but will not work in a sequence because the
A/V temp file created for a transition at either end of the
clip has been written to an area of the drive which cannot
transfer data at the required rate.
Note: for fast sequences, on drives that have not been
short-stroked, if you arrange the clips on the drives so
that clips adjacent in the sequence are always on opposite
drives, then you eliminate the need for temp files stored
on the slower tracks on the drive. You will be able to
play sequences which you could not play if temp files were
required.
8) The audio or video drives are operating at too hot a temperature, and are not performing up to specifications. Many end users have reported that improving the cooling of their audio and video drives has corrected stuttering and glitching in the audio and video.
See Also: Stutters in Video at Cut Edits
Video Toaster FAQs
Flyer FAQs
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