Creative Communities of the World Forums

The peer to peer support community for media production professionals.

Activity Forums Adobe Premiere Pro H.264 .mov file export – awful quality

  • H.264 .mov file export – awful quality

    Posted by Jan Becker on September 18, 2011 at 6:29 am

    I’m switching from FCP to Premiere and I can’t get a clean export out of premiere pro CS5.
    My client wants a H.264 .mov file and it looks awful when I export it.

    Apple Compressor gave me a clean result every time, it’s 10 times better.

    I must be making a mistake.

    I researched it in the forums but couldn’t find a solution

    Jan

    Jan Becker replied 14 years, 7 months ago 4 Members · 4 Replies
  • 4 Replies
  • Petros Kolyvas

    September 18, 2011 at 1:03 pm

    Source format and H.264 target settings would be a start to help us diagnose the issue with you.

    In Compressor were you using a preset or did you customize the settings?

    We use AME to export h.264 (in an mp4 wrapper not mov – though it should make no difference) and are very pleased with the results; not to mention how much faster AME is than Compressor.

    One issue with AME is that sometimes it tries to use a difference framerate than the source material (for example the Vimeo HD preset attempts to compress pictures at 29.97fps when our sources are most often 23.976.) Otherwise, it’s been pretty reliable.


    There is no intuitive interface, not even the nipple. It’s all learned. – Bruce Ediger

  • Chris Tompkins

    September 18, 2011 at 3:23 pm

    Are you sending it to AME?
    Purhaps a screenshot of your specs/settings will help.
    We have no prob. getting good looking h.264 files outta APP using AME.

    Chris Tompkins
    Video Atlanta LLC

  • John-michael Seng-wheeler

    September 25, 2011 at 12:36 am

    With AME CS3 I made H.264 .movs all the time. When I switched to CS5, suddenly the same (as far as I can tell) settings looked awful. I switched to H.264 .mp4s and everything was back like it should be.

    I have no idea if this is true, but theoretically, because quicktime is 32bit, making an .mov H.264 should take much longer then a raw Mp4 file which is would be rendered by a 64bit engine. (assuming the Main Concept encoder is 64bit… which is I think was AME uses when it makes Mp4 files)

  • Jan Becker

    September 28, 2011 at 6:04 pm

    I could never find the solution.
    I guess I forget about the Quicktime wrapper and create straight MP4 files.
    They are great quality and my client didn’t complain.

We use anonymous cookies to give you the best experience we can.
Our Privacy policy | GDPR Policy