I highly appreciate you comments and tipps. I have some replies and further questions (below).
QUOTE (SS Scott @ Jun 15 2008, 03:47 PM)

That can't be true as a rule unless you hae some crippled version of avid. I have had many Avid users output HD QT reference files and use those to create discs.
When I try to export a Quicktime Reference file I am told by Avid Media Composer V. 2.7.5 that this option is not available for GOP material and I don't think that my Avid is crippled.
Could it be that the people you have in mind first downconverted their material to DV?
QUOTE (SS Scott @ Jun 15 2008, 03:47 PM)

you could also output a QT file...though that will be a very large file. Go over to Avid's forum and see if you can get some tips on outputting a QT reference file from your material.
In the meantime, anticipating your suggestion, I actually have already made some experiments and the results for a small section of my film were promising. I am now in the process of applying the idea to the whole film.
QUOTE (SS Scott @ Jun 15 2008, 03:47 PM)

Couple of things to check out:
1) don't use MPA audio. try to output either PCM or AC3 you will have more success. in fact, that could be the problem.
2) don't use VBR encoding in Squeeze. I suspect DVDit Pro HD is reencoding your file due to something illegal. I further suspect that for some reason DVDit Pro HD is detecting almost nil data at the location that is being cut off. ie, it's stopping the transcode at that location because it thinks the file is finished.
The audio as such was never a problem. Are you suggesting that a perfect mpa audio could cause a problem on the video side?
I did not go through Sorensen Squeeze, so I had not chosen VBR in Squeeze.
Inside DVDit Pro HD, it did not make a difference whether I chose CBR or VBR.
If your explanation of the stopping of the transcode is correct, and again I have had already the same idea and therefore I sympathize with it, then I still wonder why the transcoding did not stop much earlier. Looking just at the film's content, it could have stopped at any time before.
Further questions:
Is it wise to avoid compression inside Avid if you go through either Sorensen Squeeze and/or
DVDit Pro HD or both given that both Sorensen and DVDit do compressive transcoding?
Is it wise to go through Sorensen Squeeze given that DVDit Pro HD does its own transcoding?
What sort of coding is going on inside DVDit when Sorensen Squeeze has already been used/applied?
Do I get better quality if I let either Avid or Sorensen do the compression instead of DVDit Pro HD?
These questions have implications for my current experiment/strategy which is to
produce a quicktime movie using the Avid 1:1x codec which avoids any compression and thus has the disadvantage of outputting large files but has the advantage of being faster than a codec that does compress. I am currently applying this strategy and the machine is still working to produce the quicktime files. (It takes about 8 hours to output 1 hour of film.) When finished, I intend to avoid Sorensen and let DVDit do all the compression. As I said before, for a small section from the beginning of my film, the strategy worked. Soon I shall know whether the strategy works for the whole film. But if it does, further questions arise: Is the resulting quality the best? Is the strategy optimal? What are the tradeoffs between quality and speed of production?
Thank you for your support and attention.