Analysis solve failed after effects как исправить
Welcome to the Community!
We have a brand new look! Take a tour with us and explore the latest updates on Adobe Support Community.
Adobe Support Community
Auto-suggest helps you quickly narrow down your search results by suggesting possible matches as you type. /t5/after-effects-discussions/analysis-solve-failed-in-ae-tried-everything/td-p/8102182 Feb 19, 2016 Feb 19, 2016Copy link to clipboard
Before coming here I have already tried the following options:
-setting AE to run as admin and turning off all Windows security software (uninstalling them)
-Uninstalling and installing AE again and running the CC cleaner software
-Fixing all footage with warp stabilization in Premiere to minimize shakiness
-Restarting the computer after each of those
I have been trying to figure this problem out to use the 3D Camera tracker as I want my 3d text to stick to a certain area of the footage as the camera movements change (ie pan up and such)
If there is an alternate way to get the 3D text to stick to a building/area of the footage (if the analysis solve failed) cannot be fixed, that would be so helpful! (Does the Motion Tracking do the same thing?)
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more1 Correct answer
Adobe Community Professional , Feb 19, 2016 Feb 19, 2016 Mylenium • Adobe Community Professional , Feb 19, 2016 Feb 19, 2016 Your workflow does not make sense at all. Applying warp stabilization creates inconsistent spatial relations in the image (or in other words, distorted lines) that mathematically don't add up. You have to track first, add your items and then stabilize. That aside, it may simply be "bad" footage shot the wrong way or with bad quality. 3D tracking doesn't do miracles and without proper planning and preparation it's quite possible that not every shot can be solved.MyleniumCopy link to clipboard
Try prerendering the Warp Stabilized footage and using it for the 3D tracker.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
How would I pre-render the warped footage?
I had previously added a warp stab effect on the footage before adding the 3D camera. Nothing
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
Your workflow does not make sense at all. Applying warp stabilization creates inconsistent spatial relations in the image (or in other words, distorted lines) that mathematically don't add up. You have to track first, add your items and then stabilize. That aside, it may simply be "bad" footage shot the wrong way or with bad quality. 3D tracking doesn't do miracles and without proper planning and preparation it's quite possible that not every shot can be solved.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
to add to this, often times the camera tracker will do a better job analyzing slightly shaky (I mean not earthquake blurry or anything) footage than it will with perfectly smooth footage. The more variations in motion it has to work with, the better, assuming things are not moving in and out of frame constantly. If you really must stabilize beforehand, which I often must, the best thing to do is a manual stabilization using basic motion tracks. Then you can tie the footage to a null and have perfect control over the speed and direction of motion, which in turn will allow you to match those keyframes up to those of the camera tracker, once applied. But yeah, before tracking for camera motion, you should precomp and maybe add an unsharp mask adjustment layer above your footage and render it out in a lossless format to use as your base footage with the camera tracker.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
Hey, I am trying to use "Track Camera" in After Effects 2021, It's showing 'Analyasis Solve Failed', Help me please. I am not doing anything else. I just drag the clip, open tracker and hit Track Camera, after like 5 minutes or so, it shows the Analysis Solve Failed. I am new to After Effects, I don't know anything about it. PLEASE HELP ME!!
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
you can pre-compose your footage and add the warp stabilizer on the clip inside the pre-comp. After that has processed, you can track the camera in the main composition that has the pre-comp in it. Make sense. Works great for me.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
I'm having the same problem. I'm trying to apply the 3D Camera Tracker for a person using a selfie stick on a snowboard. I have split layer video into 1 second increments, applied warp stabilizer then PreComped, and masked out the snowboarded himself. Is it just not possible for After Effects to handle this? If it is, I'll go through the pains of creating it, but if it's not, I'd like to know as well. But, I'm optimistic I'm over looking something! Thanks for any advice you can give.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
Hi erikj7. Sorry this is such a late reply. Looks like you figured out your problem. One issue I can think of with your comment is that you're cutting your footage into 1 second increments to stabilize it. That is probably why the camera is failing. Did you try tracking the camera on the footage without cutting and stabilizing? I'm guessing stabilizing the whole clip zooms in way too much. Is that the problem you ran into? I hope this helps. two months later.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
I tend to lean to Mylenium's earlier comment that it could just be a bad shot. It's not uncommon to get a failed analysis if the footage is not suited for tracking. Also, if the footage has a cut in scene of any sort, it will also fail. I presume that should go without saying but throwing it out there anyway.
Can you shot some of the footage?
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
I went back plugged in some footage of me doing the same on a snowboard, and it worked. You and Mylenium are correct - Bad footage.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
Glad you figured it out and sorry to hear about the bad footage. I know that can be frustrating, especially if you are unable to reshoot it.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
I have the same problem and I've traced it back to the length of the footage. I got camera tracking accomplished with 20 sec video but couldn't get it done with 40-50 sec clip. So what is the clip length this can handle? Anyone has knowledge about this?
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
It is not clip length but what goes on in the clip that causes the failure. Some kinds of motion will not camera track. Some kinds of motion cannot be solved by camera tracking. It all depends on the shot.
You need fixed geometry like walls, rocks, parked cars. You need some parallax changes or perspective shifts. You cannot track a shot that has a camera zoom. You cannot successfully analyze a shot that has a lot of lens distortion and camera erratic movement. If you have actors that are walking through the scene then you may need to remove the trackers that attach themselves to the moving actors before you get a successful camera solution. You should plan your shots and block your actors with camera tracking in mind rather than just shoot and try and track later. No camera tracker exists that can successfully solve for the camera move on every shot.
Post the shot and we can give you some suggestions or tell you whether or not the shot can be successfully analyzed.
Welcome to the Community!
We have a brand new look! Take a tour with us and explore the latest updates on Adobe Support Community.
Adobe Support Community
Auto-suggest helps you quickly narrow down your search results by suggesting possible matches as you type. /t5/after-effects-discussions/analysis-solve-failed-in-ae-tried-everything/td-p/8102182 Feb 19, 2016 Feb 19, 2016Copy link to clipboard
Before coming here I have already tried the following options:
-setting AE to run as admin and turning off all Windows security software (uninstalling them)
-Uninstalling and installing AE again and running the CC cleaner software
-Fixing all footage with warp stabilization in Premiere to minimize shakiness
-Restarting the computer after each of those
I have been trying to figure this problem out to use the 3D Camera tracker as I want my 3d text to stick to a certain area of the footage as the camera movements change (ie pan up and such)
If there is an alternate way to get the 3D text to stick to a building/area of the footage (if the analysis solve failed) cannot be fixed, that would be so helpful! (Does the Motion Tracking do the same thing?)
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more1 Correct answer
Adobe Community Professional , Feb 19, 2016 Feb 19, 2016 Mylenium • Adobe Community Professional , Feb 19, 2016 Feb 19, 2016 Your workflow does not make sense at all. Applying warp stabilization creates inconsistent spatial relations in the image (or in other words, distorted lines) that mathematically don't add up. You have to track first, add your items and then stabilize. That aside, it may simply be "bad" footage shot the wrong way or with bad quality. 3D tracking doesn't do miracles and without proper planning and preparation it's quite possible that not every shot can be solved.MyleniumCopy link to clipboard
Try prerendering the Warp Stabilized footage and using it for the 3D tracker.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
How would I pre-render the warped footage?
I had previously added a warp stab effect on the footage before adding the 3D camera. Nothing
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
Your workflow does not make sense at all. Applying warp stabilization creates inconsistent spatial relations in the image (or in other words, distorted lines) that mathematically don't add up. You have to track first, add your items and then stabilize. That aside, it may simply be "bad" footage shot the wrong way or with bad quality. 3D tracking doesn't do miracles and without proper planning and preparation it's quite possible that not every shot can be solved.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
to add to this, often times the camera tracker will do a better job analyzing slightly shaky (I mean not earthquake blurry or anything) footage than it will with perfectly smooth footage. The more variations in motion it has to work with, the better, assuming things are not moving in and out of frame constantly. If you really must stabilize beforehand, which I often must, the best thing to do is a manual stabilization using basic motion tracks. Then you can tie the footage to a null and have perfect control over the speed and direction of motion, which in turn will allow you to match those keyframes up to those of the camera tracker, once applied. But yeah, before tracking for camera motion, you should precomp and maybe add an unsharp mask adjustment layer above your footage and render it out in a lossless format to use as your base footage with the camera tracker.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
Hey, I am trying to use "Track Camera" in After Effects 2021, It's showing 'Analyasis Solve Failed', Help me please. I am not doing anything else. I just drag the clip, open tracker and hit Track Camera, after like 5 minutes or so, it shows the Analysis Solve Failed. I am new to After Effects, I don't know anything about it. PLEASE HELP ME!!
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
you can pre-compose your footage and add the warp stabilizer on the clip inside the pre-comp. After that has processed, you can track the camera in the main composition that has the pre-comp in it. Make sense. Works great for me.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
I'm having the same problem. I'm trying to apply the 3D Camera Tracker for a person using a selfie stick on a snowboard. I have split layer video into 1 second increments, applied warp stabilizer then PreComped, and masked out the snowboarded himself. Is it just not possible for After Effects to handle this? If it is, I'll go through the pains of creating it, but if it's not, I'd like to know as well. But, I'm optimistic I'm over looking something! Thanks for any advice you can give.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
Hi erikj7. Sorry this is such a late reply. Looks like you figured out your problem. One issue I can think of with your comment is that you're cutting your footage into 1 second increments to stabilize it. That is probably why the camera is failing. Did you try tracking the camera on the footage without cutting and stabilizing? I'm guessing stabilizing the whole clip zooms in way too much. Is that the problem you ran into? I hope this helps. two months later.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
I tend to lean to Mylenium's earlier comment that it could just be a bad shot. It's not uncommon to get a failed analysis if the footage is not suited for tracking. Also, if the footage has a cut in scene of any sort, it will also fail. I presume that should go without saying but throwing it out there anyway.
Can you shot some of the footage?
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
I went back plugged in some footage of me doing the same on a snowboard, and it worked. You and Mylenium are correct - Bad footage.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
Glad you figured it out and sorry to hear about the bad footage. I know that can be frustrating, especially if you are unable to reshoot it.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
I have the same problem and I've traced it back to the length of the footage. I got camera tracking accomplished with 20 sec video but couldn't get it done with 40-50 sec clip. So what is the clip length this can handle? Anyone has knowledge about this?
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
It is not clip length but what goes on in the clip that causes the failure. Some kinds of motion will not camera track. Some kinds of motion cannot be solved by camera tracking. It all depends on the shot.
You need fixed geometry like walls, rocks, parked cars. You need some parallax changes or perspective shifts. You cannot track a shot that has a camera zoom. You cannot successfully analyze a shot that has a lot of lens distortion and camera erratic movement. If you have actors that are walking through the scene then you may need to remove the trackers that attach themselves to the moving actors before you get a successful camera solution. You should plan your shots and block your actors with camera tracking in mind rather than just shoot and try and track later. No camera tracker exists that can successfully solve for the camera move on every shot.
Post the shot and we can give you some suggestions or tell you whether or not the shot can be successfully analyzed.
Welcome to the Community!
We have a brand new look! Take a tour with us and explore the latest updates on Adobe Support Community.
Adobe Support Community
Auto-suggest helps you quickly narrow down your search results by suggesting possible matches as you type.- Home
- After Effects
- Discussions
- Analysis Solve Failed in AE-Tried everything
Copy link to clipboard
Before coming here I have already tried the following options:
-setting AE to run as admin and turning off all Windows security software (uninstalling them)
-Uninstalling and installing AE again and running the CC cleaner software
-Fixing all footage with warp stabilization in Premiere to minimize shakiness
-Restarting the computer after each of those
I have been trying to figure this problem out to use the 3D Camera tracker as I want my 3d text to stick to a certain area of the footage as the camera movements change (ie pan up and such)
If there is an alternate way to get the 3D text to stick to a building/area of the footage (if the analysis solve failed) cannot be fixed, that would be so helpful! (Does the Motion Tracking do the same thing?)
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more1 Correct answer
Adobe Community Professional , Feb 19, 2016 Feb 19, 2016 Mylenium • Adobe Community Professional , Feb 19, 2016 Feb 19, 2016 Your workflow does not make sense at all. Applying warp stabilization creates inconsistent spatial relations in the image (or in other words, distorted lines) that mathematically don't add up. You have to track first, add your items and then stabilize. That aside, it may simply be "bad" footage shot the wrong way or with bad quality. 3D tracking doesn't do miracles and without proper planning and preparation it's quite possible that not every shot can be solved.MyleniumCopy link to clipboard
Try prerendering the Warp Stabilized footage and using it for the 3D tracker.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
How would I pre-render the warped footage?
I had previously added a warp stab effect on the footage before adding the 3D camera. Nothing
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
Your workflow does not make sense at all. Applying warp stabilization creates inconsistent spatial relations in the image (or in other words, distorted lines) that mathematically don't add up. You have to track first, add your items and then stabilize. That aside, it may simply be "bad" footage shot the wrong way or with bad quality. 3D tracking doesn't do miracles and without proper planning and preparation it's quite possible that not every shot can be solved.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
to add to this, often times the camera tracker will do a better job analyzing slightly shaky (I mean not earthquake blurry or anything) footage than it will with perfectly smooth footage. The more variations in motion it has to work with, the better, assuming things are not moving in and out of frame constantly. If you really must stabilize beforehand, which I often must, the best thing to do is a manual stabilization using basic motion tracks. Then you can tie the footage to a null and have perfect control over the speed and direction of motion, which in turn will allow you to match those keyframes up to those of the camera tracker, once applied. But yeah, before tracking for camera motion, you should precomp and maybe add an unsharp mask adjustment layer above your footage and render it out in a lossless format to use as your base footage with the camera tracker.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
Hey, I am trying to use "Track Camera" in After Effects 2021, It's showing 'Analyasis Solve Failed', Help me please. I am not doing anything else. I just drag the clip, open tracker and hit Track Camera, after like 5 minutes or so, it shows the Analysis Solve Failed. I am new to After Effects, I don't know anything about it. PLEASE HELP ME!!
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
you can pre-compose your footage and add the warp stabilizer on the clip inside the pre-comp. After that has processed, you can track the camera in the main composition that has the pre-comp in it. Make sense. Works great for me.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
I'm having the same problem. I'm trying to apply the 3D Camera Tracker for a person using a selfie stick on a snowboard. I have split layer video into 1 second increments, applied warp stabilizer then PreComped, and masked out the snowboarded himself. Is it just not possible for After Effects to handle this? If it is, I'll go through the pains of creating it, but if it's not, I'd like to know as well. But, I'm optimistic I'm over looking something! Thanks for any advice you can give.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
Hi erikj7. Sorry this is such a late reply. Looks like you figured out your problem. One issue I can think of with your comment is that you're cutting your footage into 1 second increments to stabilize it. That is probably why the camera is failing. Did you try tracking the camera on the footage without cutting and stabilizing? I'm guessing stabilizing the whole clip zooms in way too much. Is that the problem you ran into? I hope this helps. two months later.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
I tend to lean to Mylenium's earlier comment that it could just be a bad shot. It's not uncommon to get a failed analysis if the footage is not suited for tracking. Also, if the footage has a cut in scene of any sort, it will also fail. I presume that should go without saying but throwing it out there anyway.
Can you shot some of the footage?
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
I went back plugged in some footage of me doing the same on a snowboard, and it worked. You and Mylenium are correct - Bad footage.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
Glad you figured it out and sorry to hear about the bad footage. I know that can be frustrating, especially if you are unable to reshoot it.
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
I have the same problem and I've traced it back to the length of the footage. I got camera tracking accomplished with 20 sec video but couldn't get it done with 40-50 sec clip. So what is the clip length this can handle? Anyone has knowledge about this?
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn moreCopy link to clipboard
It is not clip length but what goes on in the clip that causes the failure. Some kinds of motion will not camera track. Some kinds of motion cannot be solved by camera tracking. It all depends on the shot.
You need fixed geometry like walls, rocks, parked cars. You need some parallax changes or perspective shifts. You cannot track a shot that has a camera zoom. You cannot successfully analyze a shot that has a lot of lens distortion and camera erratic movement. If you have actors that are walking through the scene then you may need to remove the trackers that attach themselves to the moving actors before you get a successful camera solution. You should plan your shots and block your actors with camera tracking in mind rather than just shoot and try and track later. No camera tracker exists that can successfully solve for the camera move on every shot.
Post the shot and we can give you some suggestions or tell you whether or not the shot can be successfully analyzed.
Читайте также: