Schurby opened this issue on Dec 05, 2001 ยท 12 posts
Schurby posted Wed, 05 December 2001 at 7:56 AM
Schurby
Kiera posted Wed, 05 December 2001 at 9:04 AM
Try merging the scene into an empty one.
Schurby posted Wed, 05 December 2001 at 10:55 AM
Kiera posted Wed, 05 December 2001 at 11:02 AM
Another thought.. Try removing the .bmp file (or whatever) associated with the bryce scene file and then opening the scene file.
Kate posted Wed, 05 December 2001 at 4:06 PM
If you still have Bryce 4 you could try to see if it will load in there.
Schurby posted Wed, 05 December 2001 at 4:44 PM
I do have Bryce4 but anything done in 5 won't go into 4. Thanks all anyway, it's starting to storm so time to shut this baby down. Guess I'll just have to bite the bullet and start over. Thx everyone
Schurby
EricofSD posted Wed, 05 December 2001 at 7:27 PM
I lost power on a 65m scene and had the same problem. I was unable to resolve it with Bryce. Fortunately, I had a backup of the file on another drive. Didn't need to use it though because Win ME picked up another problem after an hour of messing with Bryce and set my system restore, which brought back the file. Odd thing is that the 65m file, while it was crashing Bryce after the power failure, was reporting as 0 megs in the file manager. If your file is reporting 0 size, then its gone and you'll have to find another way to restore it. Look in the Bryce temp file and see if there's a backup there.
hogwarden posted Thu, 06 December 2001 at 10:24 AM
Yeah... Bryce does leave backups in that folder. Also, try changing the preferences settings before you try to open the [broken] file. This feature often causes my machine to crash on scene loading in B4. Set it back to the factory defaults.
Schurby posted Fri, 07 December 2001 at 8:26 AM
Thanks I'll looking in the Bryce temp file when I get home tonight. From now on I'm going to burn it to a disk before I start. Lesson Learned!!! Got XP from Dell yesterday. Gotta be better than this Junk ME...
Schurby
pmoores posted Sun, 09 December 2001 at 2:48 PM
Sad fact is that happens to all of us at least once. After learning the lesson, ive been know to have 10 files of the same pic saving every few hours and up to 400 megs on the last one. Recovered that particular pic with only 2 hours wasted when something similiar happened to me. Of course burn all your artwork once finished to cdr, because something will eventually happen and fry your entire harddrive collection.
jwalk posted Sun, 09 December 2001 at 9:04 PM
I use the render/resume button on my final renders. This allows me to stop the render, save as, then resume as often as I like. This beat render to disk due to the possible problem stated here. I'm also creating backups along the way. that can be resumed from the point I stopped for the save.
SevenOfEleven posted Wed, 19 December 2001 at 11:59 AM
If you have the disk space you could work this way. Do a few changes, save a numbered version. Bryce is smart enough to add a version number when you do a save as. If Bryce goes south, you have a previous version to work from, so you don't have to start from scratch. This is good also if while working on the picture it went down the wrong path and you want to return to a certain point.