Scott Guerin
New Member
Hello,
OBS was recommended at a tech forum I saw and I figured I would give it a try. I was using YTD Downloader to get videos downloaded off Youtube but it sometimes hick-ups and just doesn't work - currently it won't update itself as I have 64 bit Windows 7 so I can't get it to work at all now.
So I can record videos no problem with OBS - using 'window capture' I can trick it out so the control bar doesn't show up and control OBS on the second monitor which is extended to the right. Full screen video no problem....however, the audio is behind the video.
I tried the log analyzer and it mentions considering cbr (but it makes no difference). I have tried audio bit rates of 128 to 256 to no avail (also mentioned by analyzer). I have 'excessive bitrate' when I tried moving that from 1200 to 2500 and 5000 but the lag is present at all of them. The audio is almost a second behind what the screen is showing (give or take).
I tried the option called 'force desktop audio to use video timestamps as a base for audio time' and things tighten up ALMOST on time - instead of say a full second of delay there is just a fraction; noticeable now simply because it was so obvious before I have my eye on it.
I don't think my machine is sub standard; I have Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit version, core i7-4790k 4ghz processor, 16 gigs of 1860Mhz ram and a Radeon R9 video card. This should be up to the task - the cpu doesn't even move above 10% when using the program (going up from 5% when not actively encoding something). Heck, that YTD Downloader used to make essentially perfect videos tells me it isn't the computer, its either the settings or something I am missing.
I am unable to select 'quick sync' as an option - and once we start talking about messing around in the BIOS I am getting nervous as everything works just fine right now and I don't want to screw anything up. Force desktop audio to use video timestamps as a base for audio time is close but not quite.
Any ideas? I have tried cbr, no cbr, quality balance of 0, 10, max bit rates of 1200, 2500, 5000, audio encoding of 128 and 256, mp3 and aac codecs, advanced x264 settings, am 'using' cfr (whatever that is) and I even put in crf=15 as per one thread I saw (currently not using that).
OBS was recommended at a tech forum I saw and I figured I would give it a try. I was using YTD Downloader to get videos downloaded off Youtube but it sometimes hick-ups and just doesn't work - currently it won't update itself as I have 64 bit Windows 7 so I can't get it to work at all now.
So I can record videos no problem with OBS - using 'window capture' I can trick it out so the control bar doesn't show up and control OBS on the second monitor which is extended to the right. Full screen video no problem....however, the audio is behind the video.
I tried the log analyzer and it mentions considering cbr (but it makes no difference). I have tried audio bit rates of 128 to 256 to no avail (also mentioned by analyzer). I have 'excessive bitrate' when I tried moving that from 1200 to 2500 and 5000 but the lag is present at all of them. The audio is almost a second behind what the screen is showing (give or take).
I tried the option called 'force desktop audio to use video timestamps as a base for audio time' and things tighten up ALMOST on time - instead of say a full second of delay there is just a fraction; noticeable now simply because it was so obvious before I have my eye on it.
I don't think my machine is sub standard; I have Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit version, core i7-4790k 4ghz processor, 16 gigs of 1860Mhz ram and a Radeon R9 video card. This should be up to the task - the cpu doesn't even move above 10% when using the program (going up from 5% when not actively encoding something). Heck, that YTD Downloader used to make essentially perfect videos tells me it isn't the computer, its either the settings or something I am missing.
I am unable to select 'quick sync' as an option - and once we start talking about messing around in the BIOS I am getting nervous as everything works just fine right now and I don't want to screw anything up. Force desktop audio to use video timestamps as a base for audio time is close but not quite.
Any ideas? I have tried cbr, no cbr, quality balance of 0, 10, max bit rates of 1200, 2500, 5000, audio encoding of 128 and 256, mp3 and aac codecs, advanced x264 settings, am 'using' cfr (whatever that is) and I even put in crf=15 as per one thread I saw (currently not using that).