Carl:
I think you are on to something. I did have video denoise, stabilization and light correction enhancements on. While I was not watching the preview I did have my Intel performance monitor active while rendering (I built this computer just for video rendering and since it is new I wanted to watch things like CPU utilization and CPU temperature.) At one point during the render I noticed that CPU and HDD % utilization went to near zero and the PD10 process ID went to 0%. I looked at PD10 and I believe that it was at about the 7 minute mark in the render. Is there any way to tell what will make the render hiccup like this?
I'm going to investigate this and see what I can discover.
[Off Topic]
Carl:
What do you have on the timeline at the 7 minute mark?
Just as a test (new Project) you might cut (remove) everything past the 7 minutes and try producing that 7 minute video.
Then turn on the preview, I think you will be able to see when and what the render hangs on.
Once you find that point just remove that enhancement or transition and try the render again.
It is just a process of elimination to find the hiccup.
On the dislikes:
The amount of time for non program content is going up all the time.
Your 50% is extreme, but not surprising.
In this dog eat dog world, stations are just trying to survive.
Consumers are on the losing end. One thing about it, consumers do not have to buy the products and services being broadcast.
Stations do not care, they just want and need the revenue.
The really nice thing about technology, we now have the means to skip all of the commericals.
Carl312: Windows 10 64-bit 8 GB RAM,AMD Phenom II X4 965 3.4 GHz,ATI Radeon HD 5770 1GB,240GB SSD,two 1TB HDs.