taenzer
New Member
Hey,
I'am using OBS Studio for an event (in real life) to mix different video signals and to display the result using a fullscreen projector on an LED screen connected via HDMI. I mainly use live cams, video sources and graphics as overlay. The video sources also have an audio signal. On the one hand, the first 1-2 seconds of sound from all video clips "jerks", i.e. at first nothing usually comes, then it cracks briefly and then it runs normally (picture runs completely normally). Then I noticed that the level of the video source in the audio mixer is a good second ahead of the "audible sound". What I find strangest, however, is that when I have the recording running and then look at the whole thing again in the recording, the sound dropouts cannot be heard.
There is also a log file here, but without a recording or stream, since that is not running during the event.
The only line I noticed is this:
I read in another post that OBS overloads the system here. In my case, however, I can actually rule out that everything is normal in Task Manager and there is still enough power available in all areas.
System Stats:
What i tried/changed:
I'am using OBS Studio for an event (in real life) to mix different video signals and to display the result using a fullscreen projector on an LED screen connected via HDMI. I mainly use live cams, video sources and graphics as overlay. The video sources also have an audio signal. On the one hand, the first 1-2 seconds of sound from all video clips "jerks", i.e. at first nothing usually comes, then it cracks briefly and then it runs normally (picture runs completely normally). Then I noticed that the level of the video source in the audio mixer is a good second ahead of the "audible sound". What I find strangest, however, is that when I have the recording running and then look at the whole thing again in the recording, the sound dropouts cannot be heard.
There is also a log file here, but without a recording or stream, since that is not running during the event.
The only line I noticed is this:
Code:
10:44:26.864: adding 21 milliseconds of audio buffering, total audio buffering is now 21 milliseconds (source: Medienquelle)
I read in another post that OBS overloads the system here. In my case, however, I can actually rule out that everything is normal in Task Manager and there is still enough power available in all areas.
System Stats:
- Windows 10 V20H2
- Intel Core i5-6600K (3.5 GHz)
- 20 GB DDR4 RAM
- Disk: WD M2 SSD
- NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070
What i tried/changed:
- Audio Sample Rates are all 48 kHz
- other sound device
- other sound card