Inventor studio render animation quality

Inventor studio render animation quality

Anonymous
Not applicable
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7 Replies
Message 1 of 8

Inventor studio render animation quality

Anonymous
Not applicable

Hello again skillful community.

As the title says, I have a problem with the quality of Inventors rendering program.

If you look at the video i have attached in the tread, you can see alot of "ghosting" (or skipping, it looks like some of the part is still there when the part is moving. both in windows media player and VLC.)

next at 11 sec. the construction will be turned, but there is missing alot of frames, and i can't quite figure out why.

 

The settings i used is

50 fps.

 1920x1080

standard lightning

video format

25 iterations

mode high

type Gaussian width 3,0

why is the quality so bad?

the video was rendering for 80 hours

4,176 Views
7 Replies
Replies (7)
Message 2 of 8

admaiora
Mentor
Mentor

80 h...wow

I am sorry Mikael, this are known limits of Inventor Studio.

Rarely I can see clip so long renderend in studio in that "quality".

https://forums.autodesk.com/t5/inventor-ideas/unpdate-inventor-studio-like-showcase/idi-p/7908232

Admaiora
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Message 3 of 8

Anonymous
Not applicable

Hey 

 

Is there any way to render a good quality video with given Constantins form inventor?

or do you have a better solution?

 

Thank for your response

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Message 4 of 8

admaiora
Mentor
Mentor

Hi Mikael,

 

if you have 3dsMax, you can animate constraints in it.

Otherwise, you have to do that in Inventor, for long animation I suggest you to avoid raytracing mode.

Admaiora
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Message 5 of 8

dgorsman
Consultant
Consultant

50 FPS is a bit of an odd value.  Normally you would be using 24, 30, or 60.  Use 6 FPS for checking purposes before committing to the final render.

 

Not all CODECS support directly encoding 1080p resolution.  I'd recommend using at most 720p, and save 1080p for the few that require that level of quality e.g. looping on a monitor in your companies lobby.

 

Render to frames, then composite together into the video container at the very end.  This will allow adjustments without artifacts from decompressing/recompressing the video container contents.

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Message 6 of 8

Anonymous
Not applicable

I'm not sure if you figured it out but this works for me,

 

You need to save as .AVI

Full Frames (uncompressed)

I usually do 32 iterations

you can choose whichever frame rate you want I usually do 48FPS 

 

But you can expect a long render time 

 

 

Message 7 of 8

Anonymous
Not applicable

Full frames 

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Message 8 of 8

gergely.david.pogacsas
Participant
Participant

Hi everyone! I experienced this phenomenon yesterday too. The solution is to generate individual frames instead of a video, and then stitch them together in Blender, for example. It's worth watching a YouTube tutorial about this, a lot of things affect the final operation of the video. This is how I managed to achieve a very good result. Good luck!

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