"Insert chapter marker in title..."

Grunthos wrote on 9/9/2011, 8:03 AM
I have come across an error message I have not seen before in my other projects - it says:
"Insert chapter Marker in title..." and the name of the clip that I used. I can't seem to find any way around this. It is obviously trying to find a point for the layer break, but regardless of how many chapters I put it between the time it states, it still won't let me burn the DVD.

The only thing that may have something to do with it is the chapter markers in the time line have little yellow exclamation marks on them, but there seems to be no way of finding out what this means.

Do you have any suggestions?

Many thanks,

David

Comments

PeterDuke wrote on 9/9/2011, 8:07 PM
You didn't say but I presume you are trying to burn to a DL DVD. Is that correct?

If you don't have a marker in a suitable place for the layer break, DVDA will prompt you to insert one in a certain range. That has always worked for me, so I don't know what could be wrong.

Were the markers created in Vegas or in DVDA? If the former, do you get the exclamation mark if you insert a marker from DVDA?
lynn1102 wrote on 9/10/2011, 7:23 PM
I just ran into this. Move the marker one frame one way or the other and the yellow mark should go away.

Lynn
hollyviewvideo wrote on 11/21/2012, 3:04 PM
Same problem here. I had inserted markers in Sony Vegas before rendering.

The yellow exclaimation went a way if I move the marker in DVD architect.

However, I cannot get the message to go away and let me burn the DVD.
Paul Masters wrote on 11/24/2012, 10:54 AM
Remember that chapter marks have to be at I frames.

In Vegas the MPEG2 template allows for making I frames at chapters.

In DVDA it is sometimes hard to tell if the mark is at an I frame as the color difference in the marker is hard to see.

When in doubt, move the marker a little to make DVDA show where the I frames are and then move the marker to one of them. You may have to zoom in very close to put the marker in the right spot.

Hope this helps.

Paul Masters