mirkosp wrote:That's... what.
So. You made the script and those same frames were properly deinterlaced.
THEN, after hdd issues, you get that terrible combing on the previously clean frames?
I honestly am at a loss myself. Unless you're using a non frame-accurate filter to load the source, avisynth is surely deterministic, which means that the results of the same filterchain on the same footage will always be identical.
I guess this will teach you how unsafe fake avi editing ends up being. :\
As I said, if fixing from scratch is not an option, you should first try to run vinverse. Assuming you don't do ANY zoom of any amount, it will work (if it does, you might also want to give nnedi3() a try, since postprocessing the whole thing might fix it clean). If you have to zoom, it will fail, and you will have to do some vertical blurring and/or lowering the resolution, possibly by half, in order to hide it as simple blending. But restoring clean frames would be impossible in this latter case. In the former, as I said, nnedi3 or some other postprocessing filter could do.
I guess you could try to do the basic editing WITHOUT any zooms, export, nnedi3 on that and see how it comes out, and the reload and add zooms and effects to that. You're going to have to edit in bits like that if you want a better quality output at this point, but not like you can really do much anymore.
EDIT: Oh, so it's just a vegas preview fail or something and in final render it's fine? You might want to check your project settings then, maybe you accidently switched the timeline from progressive to interlaced.
It says my time-line is fine. Hmmm. I'm not sure myself what is going on. I've never had an issue with my video preview before, so I have no clue what's going on. The render is fine though.
There is however, a little bit of interlacing at points before this in the final render, but it's in no way noticeable unless you're looking for it.
I'm pretty sure I can fix that with a final render no problem. All my videos normally have a little interlacing in them, but I'm normally able to get it out before or during final render.
here's hopin. But don't wory. it doesn't detract from the video at all. It's like I said. You don't even notice it unless you're looking real hard for it.