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Transcoding to Pro Res
BACKGROUND: I’m making a documentary, shooting with a JVC HM750, several hours of footage a day shooting verite style. This creates XDCam EX files in a .mov wrapper. On location, it’s very convenient at the end of the day to take the camera’s SDHC cards, slip them into my MacBook Pro’s slot, and copy them to a small G Raid harddrive (and then to a second one for backup). These play fine when just viewing them in FCP 7 on the laptop or doing very simple editing.
PROBLEM: After several weeks shooting, I go back home to edit on my Mac Pro (2 x 3 GHz Quad Core with 8 GB RAM, OS X 10.6.8), I copy the files to a larger eSata G Raid and begin editing. Simple editing works fine, but as soon as I start really moving things around inevitably FCP slows down and the clips only play in slow motion, or FCP crashes when playing a long timeline, or other strangeness. I save the program, quit FCP, then reopen the project. Everything now works fine for a while, until it happens all over again.
QUESTION: My assumption at this point is that this has to do with the GOP structure of the files, and that I would be better off transcoding the files to Pro Res 422. The question is, exactly how would I best do this?
At this point I have already assembled one hour of footage from the first shoot’s 42 hours, and doubt I would use very much if any of the footage not in the assembly. Would it make sense to use Media Manager to do a Recompress to a new harddrive in order to transcode just the assembled footage to Pro Res (maybe with handles)? I assume I will be needing to get a larger and faster harddrive (G Speed eS ?)
Going forward, I have two more shoots for this project, each with about the same amount of footage. My thought would be to copy the footage as native HDCAM EX files as I have in the past on location (I need to travel light and don’t want to carry a large harddrive), but then when I get home to transcode all the files to ProRes 422 and bring these into a ProRes Easy Setup project. Does this make sense? And if so, would using Compressor be the best way to do this? Any special advice or suggestions about using Compressor?
Thanks!
Tom Valens
Tamalpais Productions
Forest Knolls, CA