You would think it'd be in the console or something, but it's not. In my case, because it was music, Avid could not playback over that corrupted section so I just checked around where it stopped playing. Another way of doing it is to look at your export status bar. See how far the completion bar gets before it crashes and apply that length ratio to your sequence to get an idea of the corrupt media's general area. From there it's kind of guess work. Look for red render bars after render, heavy effects, etc.
On Fri, Jan 31, 2014 at 2:52 PM, Dan McCabe <danlist@bestmail.us> wrote:
Is there a better system for detecting a corrupt file these days other than the old "divide and conquer"?On Thu, Jan 30, 2014, at 06:42 PM, namyrb wrote:Got this same error a couple of days ago... After hours of trying to figure out which video file was corrupt it turned out to be corrupt music that needed to be deleted and batch imported.
On Thursday, January 30, 2014, Bogdan Grigorescu <bogdan_grigorescu@yahoo.com> wrote:
I fought a similar issue (MC6.5.3 on ML10.7.5) - with this exact error - for quite a while.
In our case there were some corrupt CC renders.
Deleted the precomputes and re-rendering led to successful QT H264 export.
cheers,
BG
www.finale.tv
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