Go to the Final Cut Pro menu and select "System Settings" (keyboard shortcut Shift-Q).
The first step is to know the location of your render files. By default, this is the same as your Scratch Disk location. If you specified another location for your render files, you would have to visit that location.
Once I get my clip(s) edited and rendered in the Timeline, I add the actual render files to the Sequence in place of the original render-required clip.
I've had Nested sequence render problems, even following Apple's advice, above. So I've developed a workaround for the (un)rendering strangeness in Final Cut Pro.
"To avoid constantly re-rendering, you can place a clip with its applied filters into a sequence and then edit that sequence into other sequences [Nesting]. Because you modify the sequence In and Out points instead of the clip within the sequence, the render file for the clip is maintained."
Sometimes this happens during normal Timeline editing. Resetting In and Out points and adjusting opacity will require a rendered clip to be re-rendered. Going between Final Cut Pro and Motion will sometimes cause an item to lose its render clip affiliation. Nesting is another problem area for render files.
Apple says this was fixed in the Final Cut Pro 6.02 update, but I have render problems in Final Cut Pro version 6.0.5.
I've constantly had problems with render files becoming un-rendered in Final Cut Pro. Sometimes just closing and reopening a project will result in the render-required status bar reappearing in the Timeline.
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