Stream to Youtube stops after 1-2 minutes

rihonobs

New Member
Hi,

I am casting my gameplay of a 10-years-old game - Starcraft Remastered. My computer specs is
Lenovo LOQ purchased 2024
13th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-13650HX 2.60 GHz
16GB RAM
Geforce RTX 4060

My speedtest.net results is 90 MBits for both upload and download, which I think should be fine.

I'm streaming at 1080p 30FPS, 7000 kbits (Actually the auto configuration suggested 10000 kbits, but I lowered it).
After a few minutes of gameplay my dropped frames due to network is always 60-ish percent! Then the stream would auto-stop.
1712774767071.png


Below is my log. Can somebody point me out to the problem? Thanks so much!
 

JohnPee

Member
There are a number of issues identified in your log file. See link below:


Critical Auto-Config Wizard
The log contains an Auto-Config Wizard run. Results of this analysis are therefore inaccurate. Please post a link to a clean log file.
To make a clean log file, please follow these steps:

1) Restart OBS.
2) Start your stream/recording for about 30 seconds. Make sure you replicate any issues as best you can, which means having any games/apps open and captured, etc.
3) Stop your stream/recording.
4) Select Help > Log Files > Upload Current Log File. Send that link via this troubleshooting tool or whichever support chat you are using.

Critical Max Audio Buffering
Audio buffering hit the maximum value. This is an indicator of very high system load, will affect stream latency, and may even cause individual audio sources to stop working. Keep an eye on CPU usage especially, and close background programs if needed.

Occasionally, this can be caused by incorrect device timestamps. Restart OBS to reset buffering.

Source affected (potential cause): Desktop Audio

Critical 97.5% Dropped Frames

Your log contains streaming sessions with dropped frames. This can only be caused by a failure in your internet connection or your networking hardware. It is not caused by OBS. Follow the troubleshooting steps at: Dropped Frames and General Connection Issues.

Critical Hardware-accelerated GPU Scheduler
The Hardware-accelerated GPU scheduling ("HAGS") feature added with Windows 10 is currently known to cause performance and capture issues with OBS, games and overlay tools. It's an experimental feature and we recommend disabling it via this screen or these instructions.

Warning Mismatched Sample Rates
At least one of your audio devices has a sample rate that doesn't match the rest. This can result in audio drift over time or sound distortion. Check your audio devices in Windows settings (both Playback and Recording) and ensure the Default Format (under Advanced) is consistent. 48000 Hz is recommended.
OBS Sample Rate: 48000 Hz
Microphone (2- Scarlett Solo USB): 44100 Hz
Speakers (Realtek(R) Audio): 48000 Hz
Headphones (Realtek(R) Audio): 48000 Hz

Warning Lenovo Vantage
Lenovo Vantage / Legion Edge is installed and is known to cause connection issues while streaming. Open Lenovo Vantage and set the "Network Boost" feature to disabled when streaming with OBS.

Info Unparseable OBS Version (windows)
Your OBS version identifies itself as 'windows', which cannot be parsed as a valid OBS version number.

Info Windows 11 22H2 (OK)
You are running Windows 11 22H2, which will be supported by Microsoft until October 2024.

Info Non-Default x264 Preset
A slower x264 preset than 'veryfast' is in use. It is recommended to leave this value on veryfast, as there are significant diminishing returns to setting it lower. It can also result in very poor gaming performance on the system if you're not using a 2 PC setup.

Info 0.2% Rendering Lag
Your GPU is maxed out and OBS can't render scenes fast enough. Running a game without vertical sync or a frame rate limiter will frequently cause performance issues with OBS because your GPU will be maxed out. OBS requires a little GPU to render your scene.


When you have done what is suggested try steaming again and if you still have problems post another log file.
 
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