Raul Alves
New Member
É problema no obs mesmo , instalei versão grátis do vmix, e ta indo sem nenhum problema no mesmo local (casa) onde tenho o problema com obs de perca de quadros.
Im sure thats pretty standard for most, but i have fiber direct to the house and have streamed for years over wifi with very few issues. constant 6500 bitrate for hours. im currently experiencing this issue for the first time as well and i dont think its my isp or pc, im almost positive its on twitchs end, i have speeds of over 500 up and down wirelessly, so even if it fluxuates it should be finem and has been up until this pointDisable the bitrate auto-adjustment in Settings->Advanced->Dynamically change bitrate to manage congestion.
Sites like speedtest.net are worthless for livestreamers. They measure peak speed only, not minimum speed (which streaming relies on). If you are on an intermittent connection, it will cause issues. If you are trying to stream over wifi, DON'T. Use a wired network cable instead.
just tested this out btw, just for kicks i made a long patch cord and connected it direct and the same issue came along, i doubled my up and download speed to 900mbps as well. It definetly isnt on my end, my pc is well above able to handle streaming at 1080p 60 fps as well, i dont know if the twitch servers are taking a dump or if im just such a low priority that im getting jagged but theres virtually nothing more i can do to fix the issue besides wait, I have a suspicion that the issue will be resolved in a day or so/not at peak hoursUpdating OBS would not cause that.
The problem is, when it comes to the internet, 95% of your connection is completely out of your control. Your connection is routed from server to server in a chain of hops. If any of those servers start having a problem, your connection is affected without anything changing on your end.
You can try unplugging the power to your modem, waiting a few seconds, and plugging it back in (and any local network switches). Sometimes a simple restart can fix problems if they are on your end. Many 'home routers' can soft-fail from time to time, and a reboot can get them working properly again.