View Full Version : Every now and then I get an error message
Floris van Eck December 24th, 2006, 03:45 PM Every now and then, I get a error message from Adobe Premiere 2.0.
"Sorry Premiere has encountered a Serious error and needs to shut down."
If I remind it correctly, both times I wanted to changed the workspace while working in a project. When I clicked the workspace I need, I got this error. But this is not something I can reproduce every time. It occurs randomly.
Does anybody have any idea what can cause this error? I tried to find an answer on the Adobe Premiere Pro support forums but there's nothing there.
These are the specifications of my setup:
- Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 (2.4Ghz)
- 2GB DDR2 RAM PC 6400 (Geil)
- Gigabyte 965P-DS4 motherboard
- Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 320GB as system drive
- 2x Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 320 GB in Raid 0 configuration
- NVIDIA GeForce 7900GS 256MB (256-bit)
- Windows XP Professional Service Pack 2
- Dell 2407 FWP 24" monitor
- Creative X-Fi Platinum soundcard
Are there any weaknesses in my setup? What can I do to improve the performance of my system? I could update my RAM to 4GB. But is this useful? I have read many times that Windows XP can only handle 2GB. So with that in mind, 4GB would not improve performance at all.
I hope you can help me out. I really like the program but I would like to be able to run this program without errors.
Bart Walczak December 24th, 2006, 10:57 PM Soundblaster is not the best card to use with PPro. It might be partly responsible for the crashes you get.
Do you often scrub quickly on unrendered timeline?
Do you have many unrendered effects on your timeline?
For some reason these things make premiere less stable.
Floris van Eck December 25th, 2006, 05:18 AM Thanks for your reply! I was working with Adobe Classroom in a Book training files. Chapter 5, cuts-only video. So no effects, no transitions... only video. The video is DV, not even HDV. I am not sure what you mean by scrubbing the timeline. I am going to see if I spend more time with the program, if these errors are going to be frequent. I really hate it when I spend $1800 on a program suite and then you have errors that make no sense. I am coming from Mac and Final Cut Pro and sometime I wish I never made the change and that I had just bought a new Power Mac for a little bit more money. And the bad thing is that I really, really like the interface of Premiere Pro 2.0. If they could only make this program more stable and crash-free.
Mikko Lopponen December 25th, 2006, 09:07 AM Soundblaster is not the best card to use with PPro. It might be partly responsible for the crashes you get.
... No it's not. Ppro doesn't even do any fancy audio stuff, can't see how some simple asio or wave playback could cause any troubles like that. There are no "best soundcards" to use with premiere. If you're trying to recommend some kindof pro recording soundcard instead of a simple x-fi then you're just walking off the cliff. There won't be any difference.
Liam Carlin December 25th, 2006, 12:42 PM When these crashes have occurred how much have you edited? is there a good 2 hours on the time line or is there less? in the 2 crashes has it been the same project? you've got a good setup so i dont see why it would be crashing. maybes a corrupt file somewhere.
also what i think scrubing is is where you use the like silver bar in the timeline to move back and forth. i may be wrong but i think that is correct :-)
Bart Walczak December 26th, 2006, 07:20 PM ... No it's not. Ppro doesn't even do any fancy audio stuff, can't see how some simple asio or wave playback could cause any troubles like that. There are no "best soundcards" to use with premiere. If you're trying to recommend some kindof pro recording soundcard instead of a simple x-fi then you're just walking off the cliff. There won't be any difference.
Mikko,
I have had only bad experience with Sound Blasters and Premiere Pro. I have been running 5 different setups, of which 3 had Soundblaster installed (Audigy 2, 4 and Xi-Fi Platinum), and in every case the system was less stable than the one without SB. In one case removing SB has reduced the number of crashes we were having from about 4-6 per day to zero.
I don't know the reason, maybe SB ASIO drivers are not that well written or there is some other glitch that makes the premiere and SB not liking each other.
This is of course my own experience. Yours may be different. I didn't try to sell anything, I was just offering my own opinion based on running 5 different computers with different mainboards and processors.
Graham Hickling December 26th, 2006, 10:58 PM "Friends don't let friends use Soundblasters"
Mikko Lopponen December 27th, 2006, 04:05 AM I don't know the reason, maybe SB ASIO drivers are not that well written or there is some other glitch that makes the premiere and SB not liking each other.
Did you try using waveout instead of asio?
Floris van Eck December 27th, 2006, 06:56 AM Interesting. But which other options do I have? I can sell my X-Fi to a friend but then I will still need another sound card and I really do not like my on-board audio chip. This is really driving me nuts.
The other thing that is driving me nuts is that my computer ocassionaly throws the famous blue screen of death at me and tells me that a driver crashed the kernel but unfortunately, it does not tell me which one. I already update every imaginable driver on my computer and it still occurs.
Searching the error codes on google does not help either. I am going to reinstall my complete pc this week and see if that changes anything.
Really hate it when I do not know what is causing an error.
Harm Millaard December 27th, 2006, 07:02 AM Interesting. But which other options do I have? I can sell my X-Fi to a friend but then I will still need another sound card and I really do not like my on-board audio chip.
If you want to have any friends left, don't sell the X-Fi to a friend, instead sell it to a fiend.
Floris van Eck December 27th, 2006, 08:08 AM But what are good alternatives? If the soundblaster is the problem, I will replace it. But I cannot understand why such a standard thing as as Soundblaster would be causing Havoc to my Premiere Pro installation.
The crashes occured in the Classroom in a Book training projects which are not more then 3 minutes or so in length on the timeline. I already reinstalled the complete program once and that did not change anything.
I am going to reinstall my whole computer this week as I am moving to 10,000rpm harddisks. But I also have a driver that keeps crashing my Windows kernel and I have no idea which driver it is. I already updated all of my drivers to the latest version but I am still seeing the bluescreen of death now and then.
If only they could say which driver is malfunctioning. I really do not like the idea of turning devices on and off one at a time untill it stops crashing. I would be happy if Vista reaches service pack 1 as drivers cannot crash Windows Vista anymore. I really miss Mac OS X these days.
Mike Teutsch December 27th, 2006, 08:31 AM I used to have the same problem, but for the life of me I can't remember what fixed it. I did not change any hardware, that I know.
Have you contacted Adobe? I probably did, as I had a contract with them at the time. I know that since it was repaired I have never had the problem again.
Mike
Here is a page from Adobe dealing with the issue, but it is of course very generic. Might be worth going through the process.
http://www.adobe.com/support/techdocs/331177.html
Floris van Eck December 27th, 2006, 01:07 PM Did your Adobe crash or did you Windows crash?
Mike Teutsch December 27th, 2006, 01:09 PM Did your Adobe crash or did you Windows crash?
Adobe would crash.
Mike
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