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Activity Forums Apple Final Cut Pro Legacy FCP red line in sequence HELP.

  • FCP red line in sequence HELP.

    Posted by Peter Simmons on April 1, 2009 at 2:52 pm

    Hi,
    I have been editing in FCP 4.5 for years. Using 3×4 format digitizing from my Sony A1U and everything was fine untill now.
    Suddenly all my footage needs rendering. Secont, top , red line is above all footage.
    How do I stop this? I was told to match the codec of the clips to the codec of the sequence. I don’t know how to do either. I am a creative director not a tech guy so if you can explain please tell me ALL the details.
    Thanks,
    Peter
    https://www.OneWorldVideo.com

    Dave Johnson replied 17 years, 1 month ago 3 Members · 2 Replies
  • 2 Replies
  • Tom Wolsky

    April 1, 2009 at 3:41 pm

    First we need to get some exact and complete information from you. Look at the item properties for the clip in the browser. What does it say? Look at the item properties for the sequence in the browser. What does it say? Report back and we’ll see where we go from there.

    All the best,

    Tom

    Class on Demand DVDs “Complete Training for FCP6,” “Basic Training for FCS2” and “Final Cut Express Made Easy”
    Author: “Final Cut Pro 5 Editing Essentials” and “Final Cut Express 4 Editing Workshop”

  • Dave Johnson

    April 1, 2009 at 3:48 pm

    If FCP makes you render, it simply means one of two things …

    Either you’ve added an effect that requires rendering or …

    Something about the media is different from the sequence its in. To avoid rendering, everything about your source material must match the FCP sequence it’s in (codec, frame rate, audio settings, etc., etc.).

    About the codecs, note that all “uncompressed” video files (aka “none” codec) aren’t created equal. If the source files were made with one codec (i.e., BlackMagic) and your FCP sequence is in another (i.e., AJA), you’ll have to render. Similarly, you’ll have the same issue if both your sequence and your source files use the same “uncompressed” codec, but one is 8-bit and the other 10-bit (or DV25 & DV50 as another example).

    To determine where the difference is, when you right click the FCP bin window there is a list of things you can have it show about each file and sequence (video codec, frame rate, aspect ratio, audio codec, etc.). Check all the pertinent ones then go down the list and compare the source file specs to the FCP sequence specs.

    I hope this helps!

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