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Starting very large project in FCP — advice needed
Hi there,
I’m about to start a very large project in Final Cut Pro 7, and I’d like some advice to make the right choices from the get-go, and not experience large-project headaches later. I’m a prior Avid editor, and have just now switched to Final Cut Pro, and am finding myself a bit nervous about large projects.
The project is approximately 6 or 7 DVD/Blu-Ray discs of approximately 90 minutes each. This will be a P2 workflow with all footage being DVCPRO HD at 100 mbits (1080p). So the entire project is maybe 12 hours TRT, and I’m expecting a 10:1 or 20:1 shooting ratio, resulting in 100-200 hours of source footage. I need to have access to all footage at any point in the project, so I can’t segment this into multiple projects with different footage — any given clip might end up anywhere in the project. However, I will be able to prune source footage heavily once it’s clear which footage is used, so not all recorded footage will need to remain on the media drive.
For this, I’ve purchased the newest Mac Pro 4-core with 6 GB RAM. I have an Areca eSATA controller with the Areca 4-drive self-contained RAID 5, 4 x 1.5TB drives, giving 4.5 GB of media. The drive reads and writes at 200MB/sec sustained.
ISSUES:
Being a prior Avid editor, I’ve never really worried about project size, because bins are separate files, and you therefore only have the active bins opened. Avid therefore edits a 2 minute project with the same ease as a 100 hour project with thousands of media files.
As I understand it, Final Cut Pro will insist on having the entire project be live and loaded into memory, and on a project of this size, I’m worried about the project becoming gradually uneditable.
I would have done this project on Media Composer, which I own with a Mojo SD box, but I couldn’t swallow the $7,500 for HD output, so I talked to a lot of FCP editors I know, they said they never had any problems, so I decided to take the plunge and migrate my editing to FCP. I thus purchased this Mac Pro system, with a Kona LHi card, and the above hardware.
Obviously, it works like a charm when I’m just testing. But I’m keen on getting advice from people who have done large projects in FCP.
Specifically, I’d like if we could talk about the following issues:
1.) I need to have access to all footage at the same time. All footage can in principle end up on any volume, so it’s not possible to partition footage into several project files. Or, let me put it this way, if multiple project files are used, is there a way to have each project “subscribe” to the same footage?
2.) Chapters: The entire project will consist of about 80 or 90 chapters, which will all be a separate timeline/sequence, which are edited into the 7 main timelines. Does this lend itself to a particular workflow?
3.) Number of tracks: I’m very light on tracks, 3 video tracks total, usually, with the majority of the material on V1. But is this an issue?
4.) Effects: I’m very light on effects, except that significant portions will be a a presenter on a green screen, which will be keyed with Ultimatte RT (it will be rendered, though). All GS clips might have to be done in Motion, as on screen graphics would be needed to support the discussion. Does the number of effects affect stability?
5.) Subtitling, i.e. Avid SubCap. Is there any kind of subtitling workflow for FCP where the subtitles can reside on the timeline and be editable, such that if a project is edited, the subtitles move with the edit? Keep in mind that we can’t do Bitmap subtitles, it has to be actual metadata, so that it can be converted into DVD/Blu-Ray subtitles. It does not work for us to do subtitles as a post-process, because the project will need to be re-edited after a while, so the subtitles need to travel with it.
6.) Single Media Drive: I’ve heard some people say that all media should reside on one drive. I might be able to prune unneeded source media and keep it on the single 4.5 TB drive, which I can also capacity-expand down the line, although this results in multiple logical volumes. I was considering simply adding another 4.5 TB RAID when the time comes, but I could also simply rebuild the RAID from scratch with 2.5 TB or 3 TB drives when they become available, giving me a 9 TB RAID 5. It’s no problem to rebuild a RAID from scratch, because I have multiple full backups of the entire media drive — I’m paranoid. Which do you prefer? Pruning the 4.5 TB RAID to keep the project on that drive? Using two 4.5 TB RAIDs? Upgrading the RAID to a 9 TB RAID 5 once the space is needed, so everything stays on one drive?
7.) No Stills: I’ve read that stills really mess things up because they have to be held in RAM, and that it’s best to render everything as video files. Any other thoughts in this regard? What are some things I can do to minimize RAM usage?
Finally, I need to address the hard question, which is whether I’ve made a mistake. If I should have stuck with Avid Media Composer and sucked up the $7,500 for the HD output, please tell me. If the right thing to do is to switch back, then that is something I would have to do.
Thanks,
Per