>
> I suggest you try the recipe by Scott Frase. He is a very good friend of
> Cinelerra!
> http://youtu.be/MhaOgNQ0Bbc
>
> This link is in the documentation page I pointed you to. I strongly
> recommend you have a look at it.


Yes, I've tried that exact one. It dropped thousands of frames with just a
simple usability test of a couple minutes. Completely unusable.

So I adjusted it by using a compressed instead of raw video format and
there were no dropped frames on a 20 min recording *but* the video was
shifted.

Looking back I think it was because the screen width isn't divisible by 8,
it's 1354. I'll try trimming that and see if it makes a difference.

 How do you check the health of a capture file? I've always thought if it
>> played it was good.
>>
>
> Try playing it back frame by frame in Avidemux.


Playing it frame by frame is fine, only when you go backwards do you see
black frames.

I wonder if anyone on this list would mind spending a couple minutes
checking any of their videos just by going backwards through frames to see
if they get black frames.

Cinelerra is the only one that shows a problem when playing forward, and
only when there's an overlay.

Thanks again!

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