Best Sony Vegas Render Settings!

D60Gaming

Active Member
  • 1280x720 or 1920x1080 (both HD settings)
  • MP4 file
  • Bit rates at 10,000,000 and 8,000,000
  • Disable resample on video (right click on vid and its under properties)
  • 30 or 60 FPS (Frames Per Second)
  • Settings on best
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Bit rate over 8Mbps is useless on YouTube at 1080p or under as YouTube encodes 1080p videos at 8Mbps, you should only use higher than 8 if your video is 1440p (2560x1440) or 2160p/4K (3840x2160) which let's be honest, the average YouTube today won't make use of until global average internet speeds and monitor resolutions increase.

Both resolutions mentioned are not 16:9 which is what YouTube's players use.

See this for rendering settings from Google:

https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/1722171?hl=en

YouTube technically supports any resolution you throw at it but it will be encoded to a max of 4k 16:9, all videos on YouTube are 16:9, those that aren't will have black bars either beside, or above/below the video.

Also please don't ask us to subscribe to your channel or check it out, it's against rules.
 
Bit rate over 8Mbps is useless on YouTube at 1080p or under as YouTube encodes 1080p videos at 8Mbps, you should only use higher than 8 if your video is 1440p (2560x1440) or 2160p/4K (3840x2160) which let's be honest, the average YouTube today won't make use of until global average internet speeds and monitor resolutions increase.

Both resolutions mentioned are not 16:9 which is what YouTube's players use.

See this for rendering settings from Google:



YouTube technically supports any resolution you throw at it but it will be encoded to a max of 4k 16:9, all videos on YouTube are 16:9, those that aren't will have black bars either beside, or above/below the video.

Also please don't ask us to subscribe to your channel or check it out, it's against rules.
Both 720p and 1080p are 16:9 ratio.
 
Bit rate over 8Mbps is useless on YouTube at 1080p or under as YouTube encodes 1080p videos at 8Mbps, you should only use higher than 8 if your video is 1440p (2560x1440) or 2160p/4K (3840x2160) which let's be honest, the average YouTube today won't make use of until global average internet speeds and monitor resolutions increase.

Both resolutions mentioned are not 16:9 which is what YouTube's players use.

See this for rendering settings from Google:



YouTube technically supports any resolution you throw at it but it will be encoded to a max of 4k 16:9, all videos on YouTube are 16:9, those that aren't will have black bars either beside, or above/below the video.

Also please don't ask us to subscribe to your channel or check it out, it's against rules.
Actually, I have had bad luck with rendering 1080p 60fps videos under 20,000,000 bps, making some areas look grainy, even before upload. So I have the max it can go on the codec Sony AVC/AAC in SVP 13, which is somewhere around 24,000,000 bps. I render that and it looks fine, then upload and the quality is slightly degraded. Either way, YouTube even recommends 1080p video creators with fast internet speeds to render in 50,000 kbps, which is 50,000,000 bits. If one does not have that satisfactory of internet speed, they recommend 8,000 kbps, which is what you mention. Sure the 50,000 kbps will be re-encoded down to 8,000 but the quality does make a difference.
 
Actually, I have had bad luck with rendering 1080p 60fps videos under 20,000,000 bps, making some areas look grainy, even before upload. So I have the max it can go on the codec Sony AVC/AAC in SVP 13, which is somewhere around 24,000,000 bps. I render that and it looks fine, then upload and the quality is slightly degraded. Either way, YouTube even recommends 1080p video creators with fast internet speeds to render in 50,000 kbps, which is 50,000,000 bits. If one does not have that satisfactory of internet speed, they recommend 8,000 kbps, which is what you mention. Sure the 50,000 kbps will be re-encoded down to 8,000 but the quality does make a difference.

Google should probably make it clear what bit rate to use. :P
 
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