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#21 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 151
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It was an old behaviour of older Premiere versions where low quality render previews were used for the export instead of the original files. I just do it now out of principle, I don't know if it still behaves that way. The option in the fly out menu in AME is still there, however. So double check that before your final export
You can automatically re-link the actual files when you swap for final render. Here is a related guide http://www.dvinfo.net/forum/canon-eo...-solution.html |
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#22 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Syracuse, NY
Posts: 980
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HD footage shot 24f from an XHA1 has no pulldown. It's recorded at 24. No pulldown removal is needed. Captured files from HDVsplit will read out at 23.976 and will be immediately editable in PPCS3 and PPCS4.
It's possible the quality issues are a result of how Premiere displays the footage in the program monitors, and are not an accurate display of how the final project will look once exported in the proper manner. I would do a short test of both Final Cut and Premiere and check the final output to see if one has a quality advantage. I'd be very interested in seeing those results. Premiere does a poor job of downconverting HD footage. It looks very soft. I get much better results using TMPGEnc. I have Cineform on my system, so I always export an HD Cineform master, then import that into TMPGEnc for encoding to DVD or whatever my final delivery is. In the past I've downconverted using After Effects and the results were very good. But I had some audio sync issues. If you want to send my your Mac I'll do a side by side test. ![]() -Kevin |
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#23 | ||
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 151
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I verified the problems on that sample with PP CS4 as well. They are real, at least with that sample. Quote:
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#24 | ||||||
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Junior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 21
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RPK |
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#25 | |
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Junior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 21
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#26 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Syracuse, NY
Posts: 980
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I'm glad you're getting it worked out. I'm still a bit confused as to why there is any pulldown removal needed. The XHA1 only has pulldown if it's shooting in SD 24F, or if the camera is set to downconvert in camera HD 24F to SD 24F. The second option is where there are no pulldown flags. The HV20 on the other hand, shoots 24f inside a 60i wrapper, and there are no pulldown flags. Is it possible the footage was shot on the HV20?
Last edited by Sacksnack; 11-07-2009 at 10:46 PM. |
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#27 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 21
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I had some time over the weekend to try the frameserver workflow with a long XHA1 clip. The footage was from a 50 minute long musical performance, and I added and manually synced up externally recorded audio.
Unfortunately the externally recorded audio does drift out of sync with the footage very noticeably, especially noticeable in the percussion. Comparing the frameserved footage with the original clip, the drift seems to be 2 to 4 frames at around 35 minutes into the footage. I will try if using the DGindex workflow remedies the sync issue but haven't had the time for that yet. I guess I will also check out the trial of Cineform's NeoScene. A mistake I made describing my problem at the very beginning of this thread: It seems that captured clips I add to the timeline do in fact result in a red render bar! I have to check a few older clips to see if those didn't cause a red render bar, but this long clip definitely does not conform to the HDV 1080p preset straight out of Premiere capture. |
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