2012-07-09, 21:06 | Link #1 |
lost in wonder forever...
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: edge of my dream in the land of twilight...ZzzZzZ
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FRAPS 1080 Recording...
Anyone here use FRAPS? I recently built a new computer thinking it would be able to handle 1080p game recording, but I'm been having less than stellar performance.
Spoiler for PC Specs:
FRAPS is installed on the SSD, games are installed on the RAID 0 and the output video file is sent to the RAID 5. Is there something that is affecting my ability to record at 1080p? Spoiler for My FRAP Capture settings:
With these settings I am using, the video created is only around 20-30 FPS, but during combat in a game the frames go all over the place from 5-30FPS. Is there any way to record at 900p or 800p with FRAPS without actually changing my screen resolution? Things look horrible when I set it to record at Half Size of my native resolution (1920x1080).
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2012-07-10, 03:37 | Link #2 |
Senior Member
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Philippines
Age: 47
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Not easy, since the cap program usually produces very large AVIs, which at bigger resolutions could really slow down the system while recording.
I have my capture set up this way: * Framerate set at 24 fps * Half-size, not full-size However, I also like to try other similar freeware cap/recording programs, because of Frap's AVI-only implementation (and little has changed in the last few years).
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Last edited by sa547; 2012-07-10 at 03:57. |
2012-07-10, 08:48 | Link #3 |
lost in wonder forever...
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: edge of my dream in the land of twilight...ZzzZzZ
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Yeah, but thanks to some other sites out there I managed to tweak my system to capture some decent video now.
Apparently, my capture FPS was just too high like you said so I lowered it to 30FPS. Defragging the destination hard drive seems to really help too and putting the output file to the RAID 0 seems to have better write performance over RAID 5. The other thing to do was disable two separate audio captures as I had FRAPS capturing sound from the game and from my headset microphone which affected captured frame rate greatly. Spoiler for HD 1080P Video Test:
Here's what I got and I'm pretty happy with it, however there still seems to be some random stuttering of the video as seen in v3 test video. *sigh* Guess I need to play at a lower screen resolution while capturing to get better quality video.
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Last edited by Wandering_Youth; 2012-07-14 at 08:00. |
2012-07-15, 21:07 | Link #4 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Ontario, Canada
Age: 35
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Slightly off-topic but you wrote you had a Intel Core i5 3750K? You mean the Core i5 3570K right? Sorry, just got a little confused when I first read it. And by the way you have a very capable gaming machine which I am envious of.
I haven't used FRAPS in many years and the maximum resolution I've ever recorded at was at 1280x1024 and that was in a primarily 2D game. However I know that real-time screen recording is incredibly taxing on systems. A 1920x1080 3D screencast would be simply hellish. Anyways the FRAPS codec is not optimized for compression meaning a huge amount of data must be written to the hard drive especially when using a high resolution like yours. So I believe if you want to improve screencasting performance you'll need a storage medium with a greater throughput (Two Western Digital Velociraptors in RAID 0 may not be enough...!). So yeah. May I suggest using a 240 GB (or larger) solid state drive utilizing a second generation Sandforce controller as a target drive? Last edited by Stealthtank; 2012-07-15 at 21:23. Reason: Grammar |
2012-07-16, 18:11 | Link #5 |
lost in wonder forever...
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: edge of my dream in the land of twilight...ZzzZzZ
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You are correct, I meant a 3570k. I actually noticed another problem when trying to view these ridiculously large uncompressed videos. My player can't seem to play the video smoothly so when I view it the frames were bouncing all over the place so I thought it was not capturing properly. In reality it was the player that wasn't playing the video properly, but once I compress it the played video was smooth as butter.
I switch the output file back to the RAID 5 array as I heard that it might actually be better than the RAID 0 since I got four hard drives for the RAID 5. Yeah it took a 2 months pay to build my toy, but I love it and probably won't have to buy another computer for another 5-8 years. If Moore's Law is true on electronics then there won't be too much incentive to upgrade my machine until the gap in performance is really big.
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