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Activity Forums Adobe Premiere Pro how to export without re-encoding, in native timeline codec?

  • how to export without re-encoding, in native timeline codec?

    Posted by Andrei Bocharnikov on January 31, 2009 at 1:14 pm

    Hi,

    In PPro we are working with the P2 DVCPRO HD files natively. Now we want to export timeline of one project that I can use it as part of other project and we want it in the same codec without re-encoding. In the export settings we can not find any DVCPRO based codec.

    How to do it?

    Actually we are struggling with 55min long documentary project. As we progress in editing Premier starts to crash more and more often. we are in the middle of editing and now it crashes almost every 15 minutes of working and behavior very slow. To open project it takes about 20 minutes. It is not the way to continue.

    Please share what is your workflow for the editing long videos and rough footage material of about 1.5 TB. If we split project to parts then how we put all the edited part together for final cut?

    just any suggestion is appreciated.

    thank you,
    Andrei. B

    MacPro Dual Quad 2.8 GHz, 4 GB DDR2 SDRAM, Leopard 10.5.6, QT 7.5.5, FCS2

    David Keslick replied 17 years, 3 months ago 3 Members · 3 Replies
  • 3 Replies
  • Andrei Bocharnikov

    January 31, 2009 at 1:55 pm

    … I want to say that this problem is on PC and not on Mac. PC has Core2 Quad 2.5 Ghz processor, 3.25 Gb RAM, around 600 Gb free available space on Hard Disk.

    Please help.

    Andrei

    MacPro Dual Quad 2.8 GHz, 4 GB DDR2 SDRAM, Leopard 10.5.6, QT 7.5.5, FCS2

  • Tracy Peterson

    February 1, 2009 at 5:50 pm

    Have you tried using the media manager? I’m not sure the end purpose of your video after export, but there is a way to use the media manager to create a trimmed file version of the premiere project, keeping only the used portions of the videos. I have not tried this with P2 but it works great for HDV.

    Tracy Peterson
    http://www.onetwomany.com

  • David Keslick

    February 3, 2009 at 6:04 pm

    You may want to check out Dvfilm Encoder Pro. It will enable you to create a dvcprohd quicktime that could then be used in another project.

    Hope this is helpful.

    Dave Keslick
    DVFilm.com

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