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OMF Export Not at Timeline Framerate!!
Posted by Robert Due on March 3, 2009 at 5:19 pmI am editing a project at 23.98 fps. When I export an OMF for my audio engineers to use, they say it imports at 24 fps. Furthermore, I export a QT of my sequence (using the same ins and outs as the OMF export) and when they line them up on their system they are out of sync. Any advice on what I should do to get an OMF exported at the same frame rate as my sequence?
Robert Due
Editor / Colorist
INDEPENDENT EDITTyler Williams replied 14 years, 3 months ago 3 Members · 6 Replies -
6 Replies
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Tyler Williams
February 15, 2012 at 7:40 pmI am having this exact problem right now. Did you ever find a solution?
Thanks.Mac Pro 2 x 2.93 GHz Quad-Core 14GB RAM
NVIDIA GeForce GT 120
Matrox MXO2 LE
Firmware V 24.0
Software V 1.8.1.0009OSX 10.6.2
Final Cut Pro 6.0.6 -
Robert Due
February 15, 2012 at 7:50 pmSorry Tyler, we don’t have this problem anymore. I am currently running FCP 7.0.3 – not sure if that helped the situation or not.
I don’t export from FCP anymore. I run my sequence through Compressor and the audio guys reference picture from that. We also do mostly :30 commercials so drifting sync over time isn’t an issue for us.
You can add a time code window burn in Compressor to you QT for the audio guys. That might aid in finding sync issues.
Hope that helps…Good luck.
Robert Due
Editor / Colorist
INDEPENDENT EDIT -
Tyler Williams
February 15, 2012 at 7:58 pmThanks, Robert.
I’m on 7.03 as well. My sequence is 23.98 but when I export the OMF and bring it into ProTools it opens as 24fps. Very frustrating. Strangely, this happened when I exported my timecode screener for them as well. ProTools thought it was 24 when it wasn’t. I had to run it through Cinema Tools and conform it to 23.98 before ProTools would accept it. Unfortunately I can’t do the same for my OMF export.
It’s definitely some kind of miscommunication between FCP and ProTools I just can’t figure out how to fix it. I’ll keep trolling the forums.
Thanks again.
Mac Pro 2 x 2.93 GHz Quad-Core 14GB RAM
NVIDIA GeForce GT 120
Matrox MXO2 LE
Firmware V 24.0
Software V 1.8.1.0009OSX 10.6.2
Final Cut Pro 6.0.6 -
Robert Due
February 15, 2012 at 8:04 pmAgain, sorry and good luck.
Robert Due
Editor / Colorist
INDEPENDENT EDIT -
Michael Gissing
February 15, 2012 at 8:59 pmI use Fairlight so don’t know if this is a specific ProTools problem but there is a potential problem doing a quicktime conversion from FCP. You must set the frame rate when you export this way. Don’t leave it on ‘current’ as a weird frame rate will be stamped into the metadata.
What happens if you import as 24 and then change the ProTools project to 23.98 (actually 23.976) ?
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Tyler Williams
February 15, 2012 at 9:55 pmI think that may have been the case with the quicktime that I exported for the sound editor. I sent it through Compressor but left it as current assuming that Final Cut would actually do it’s job. How silly of me. Running it through Cinema Tools afterwards got it working properly as 23.976 in ProTools.
Now a similar thing is happening with the OMF export, where ProTools interprets it as 24. I’m seeing lots of similar posts describing this being a problem with OMF’s sent out of 23.98 FCP sequences. Next time I’m in session I will have her try importing it as 24 and then changing the session to 23.976. It will then have to be transferred into our existing session with all of our ADR work, but I imagine that shouldn’t be a big deal.
I’ll try to keep the thread updated with my results.
Thanks.
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