Jesse Juhlke
December 29th, 2009, 03:29 PM
Hello,
I have been exporting a large number of .flv's for a client via the built-in Adobe Media Encoder in Premiere Pro 2.0 - with much success, except for one sequence that causes Premiere to shut down 62% into the export process. Also; exporting as a Microsoft .AVI from the same timeline, the same problem occurs.
OS Specs:
Windows XP Pro SP2
Software:
Premiere Pro 2.0
Timeline Specs:
Video is .AVI with MP3 audio (since Premiere Pro has poor support for MP3 audio encoding in .AVI's, I used Virtual Dub to save a .WAV audio file from the original .AVI, and dropped the .WAV into the timeline. When I import the original .AVI into Premiere, the audio was missing because it was MP3. This is the format that I received the original files in). I did this for the other 3 of the 4 videos received in this format (.AVI with MP3 audio), and they exported to .FLV successfully.
I'm thinking it is a corrupt file (eventhough the original .AVI plays back in Windows Media Player successfully).
All advice is greatly appreciated. This problem is new to me.
Thanks,
Jesse
I have been exporting a large number of .flv's for a client via the built-in Adobe Media Encoder in Premiere Pro 2.0 - with much success, except for one sequence that causes Premiere to shut down 62% into the export process. Also; exporting as a Microsoft .AVI from the same timeline, the same problem occurs.
OS Specs:
Windows XP Pro SP2
Software:
Premiere Pro 2.0
Timeline Specs:
Video is .AVI with MP3 audio (since Premiere Pro has poor support for MP3 audio encoding in .AVI's, I used Virtual Dub to save a .WAV audio file from the original .AVI, and dropped the .WAV into the timeline. When I import the original .AVI into Premiere, the audio was missing because it was MP3. This is the format that I received the original files in). I did this for the other 3 of the 4 videos received in this format (.AVI with MP3 audio), and they exported to .FLV successfully.
I'm thinking it is a corrupt file (eventhough the original .AVI plays back in Windows Media Player successfully).
All advice is greatly appreciated. This problem is new to me.
Thanks,
Jesse