Question / Help Adding Delay = 0kb/s / Stream not @ 60fps

RunOnFlat

New Member
Since I have been streaming every time I try adding delay via OBS to my stream my OBS keep saying 0kb/s and nothing is being broadcasted. I had this problem when I was streaming off my gaming pc but recently I purchased a streaming PC also and I get the same issue.
I tried adding delay via Twitch itself and for some reason my OBS tells me that kb/s are being uploaded/streamed however nothing is showing up on the live broadcast at all.

Lastly my stream does not seem to be @ 60fps at all even tho I have it on 60fps.
Any suggestions?
 
Adding a delay in OBS means OBS stores its output for the length of the delay before transmitting it. For example if you add a 30 second delay it will read 0 Kbps for 30 seconds before it starts sending data out.

Regarding stream performance, please post a log.
 
Regarding the framerate, post a logfile. We need it to be able to help. Why it asks for one any time a new thread is opened in Q&H.
 
Enable Aero. It greatly improves OBS' performance.
Also, we need a log from a live streaming session at least 5 minutes in length to have usable, representative data. That log is less than 15 seconds long, and is a local recording only. It tells us nothing. (Other than that you have Aero disabled for some reason.)
 
aero is still disabled. uncheck disable aero in the video tab of OBS and use a windows aero enabled theme.

uncheck force desktop audio to use video timestamps.

lower webcam resolution to no more than what your are broadcasting at. i.e in your case 720p. This will help your audio sync more than the timestamps will.


Personally, I wouldn't stream over wireless. you are asking for trouble that could be mitigated by just using a wired connection.
 
Enable Aero. It greatly improves OBS' performance.
Also, we need a log from a live streaming session at least 5 minutes in length to have usable, representative data. That log is less than 15 seconds long, and is a local recording only. It tells us nothing. (Other than that you have Aero disabled for some reason.)
aero is still disabled. uncheck disable aero in the video tab of OBS and use a windows aero enabled theme.

uncheck force desktop audio to use video timestamps.

lower webcam resolution to no more than what your are broadcasting at. i.e in your case 720p. This will help your audio sync more than the timestamps will.


Personally, I wouldn't stream over wireless. you are asking for trouble that could be mitigated by just using a wired connection.
Thanks for the tips guys, I finally managed to realize my mistakes, unfortunately not much I can do about streaming via wireless, hopefully in the next few months I may possibly be able to switch to wired, but for now it will do.
I tried power line before and I more or less was getting the same results as WiFi so it's just "meh" atm
 
Thanks for the tips guys, I finally managed to realize my mistakes, unfortunately not much I can do about streaming via wireless, hopefully in the next few months I may possibly be able to switch to wired, but for now it will do.
I tried power line before and I more or less was getting the same results as WiFi so it's just "meh" atm
yeah powerline isn't good because it can be shared. the best is a cat5e (or greater) cable
 
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