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I think I have found the answer to my problem. It is not the bit rate, but the last setting for outputting the video.

Without realising it, I had been using 1920 x 1080/24p for the recording to disc. By changing this to 1920 x 1080/50i, I seem to have removed the problem with the jumping of the playback, but there are a couple of issues regarding transitions. I went back and re-read the manual for the camera and realised that there are two slightly different settings mentioned, depending on whether you are recording in 3D or 2D. I had been using the 24p setting as this was the nearest one to the 25P mentioned for the 2D setting. By changing up to 50i it seems to have removed the problem.

Kind regards
Vanman.
First, my apologies for getting the wrong Forum. I thought I had logged into the Power Director Forum, not the Power DVD Forum.

In response to the question, I am using Power Director 12 as the editing programme and Power DVD 13 as the playback programme for my computer.

Over the weekend, I have had a little play with the Power Director and another editing programme from a rival company. The results are different. I took the same clips for both editing programmes and made a short 2 minute video. I then converted it into a disc and played it back. The rival programme produced a disc the was smooth in playback, both on the computer under Power DVD and also on the Blue-ray disc attached to the TV. The Power Director video still jumped slightly, even after I have tried the output with four different settings.

While I was playing back the Power Director Video on the TV, it was noted that at the start of the disc, there was a short flash up on the screen that the disc was in 12bit. My brother thinks this could be the problem as he has also had problems transferring videos from the TV onto disc. When he recorded in 12bit, he too said that the picture appeared to jump slightly. When the settings were changed to 24bit, the output from the video was smoother. I did not realise that the Power Director settings I was using were set to 12bit. I now want to try and up the rate to 24bit to see if that resolves the problem. Looking at the settings through for Power Director, there does not appear to be a setting that allows me to change the bit rate. I will have to log onto the Power Director Forum to see if I can get an answer.

Many thanks for your help.
Vanman.
Best start with the last questions first. I am only trying to create video discs not data discs. I am trying to get down to about 90 minutes a disc, even through I have more video. I am being critical with how I edit it.

I have not tried turning off the rendering when making the disc. I have tired the various formats, MPEG2, MPEG 4, but with no luck. I will try again tonight with the rendering setting off and let you know what happens after I have completed it.

As far as I know, I am up todate with the patches for Power Director 12 Ultimate, but I will check this again, just in case I down loaded a patch, but forgot to active it.

Many thanks for the help. I will be in touch later.

Vanman.
Many thanks for the reply.

I had not considered the discs as I have been having trouble with various maunfacturers. I have tried Sony, Panasonic and Verbatim and have had similar results on all the discs. Before I burn a disc, I always use a recordable one to proppf test. At present I am using Panasonic, but I also have a TDK. I seem to get the same results on these discs as I do on the burn discs. Unfortunatley, I need to copy the videos to disc as I cannot keep storing them on my computer. I have over ten hours of video from railway holidays last year and it was when I started copying them to disc that I started noticing the problem. I had bought a 3D camera and was trying it out. This is why I bought Power Director, to edit the videos. The same thing has heappened again while trying to sort out videos from Christmas. The jumping is only slight, but it does distract from the viewing of the disc. My only other avenue, is the pictures from the camera itself, but when you view them directly onto the TV, there is no jumping from them. At present, I am at a loss as to how to overcome this problem. Everything I seem to try does not cure it.

Regards
Vanman.
When I pay my Blue-ray video back, the picture appears to jump slightly. I have tried using different output settings, but the same think happens. The slight jumping occurs on both my computer and my Blue-ray disc player. The only thing I could think of, is that the graphic card may be playing up, but I have had this checked and there does not seem to be a problem
I have had very limited luck so far. I contacted support and was advised to use the latest download for Power Director 10, which I have done. When I then tried writing a reverse video project to disc, I was successful with the first clip I had added, but the other reverse video sections still came out black. I am still experimenting with the reverse clip, but at present, if I add more than one clip, I find that the first one works but the others still comes out black on the burned disc. The reverse clip section thast did work does not run smoothly on the disc, but is slightly jerky. Something else I need to look at.
I have added some clips into a video which I have then reversed. I then produced the video before creating a disc. When I viewed the created disc, the reverse video's wrere black, but the sound track I had added was audible. How do you add reverse video clips that you can see. I had produced the video in 2D (the video is in 3D) to start off with in MP4 format.
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