Forum Replies Created

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  • Alex Jusay

    October 19, 2006 at 2:57 pm in reply to: How to set export setting in Premiere Pro 2

    If you convert your 2d animation (720×576,1.067 pixel aspect ratio,4:3 frame aspect ratio) to 1:1.85, there will be rescaling that might soften your animation. Its a good idea to create the 2D animation in the aspect ratio of the target output. Otherwise, make a custom project setting in Premiere and edit in desktop mode. The best path would be to edit in “normal” PAL editing mode and have the tape converted.

    Hope that helps…

  • Alex Jusay

    October 19, 2006 at 2:46 pm in reply to: Why needing render

    if your source is DV and you have the right project setting for your footage, then its not normal.

  • Alex Jusay

    October 19, 2006 at 2:42 pm in reply to: 16:9 becoming 4:3 on render…

    check your project setting. If you import 16:9 to a 4:3 project, the 16:9 clip would be converted.

  • Alex Jusay

    October 12, 2006 at 1:26 pm in reply to: Premier Pro Audio issues

    Premiere will try to convert or conform almost whatever audio file you throw at it, but it doesnt mean it will resample effectively. Your wav file may have different sample or frequency rates. Try converting the wav files using audition or cool edit pro (especially if it needs upsampling), before you import it to Premiere.

    Hope that helps…

  • Alex Jusay

    October 12, 2006 at 1:20 pm in reply to: Hard Drives>> SATA 3.0Gb/s Firewire A/B

    Both hard drives, internal or external will work fine if your working on DV footage. However, for HD work, you’re better with the internal one, as there are a lot of possible bottlenecks with external drives.

  • Alex Jusay

    October 12, 2006 at 1:18 pm in reply to: WMV import issues.

    Check the frame rate of your WMV file. Remember that Premiere usually works in standard frame rates of 24, 29.97, 25. Your WMV source must be lower than your projects’ frame rate.

  • Alex Jusay

    October 12, 2006 at 1:13 pm in reply to: x on movie clips in Premiere pro.

    you may be using a trial version of a plugin and it expired.

  • Alex Jusay

    October 12, 2006 at 1:09 pm in reply to: Disk/ Raid setup on a new system, what do you suggest???

    that would be a nice setup. However, can windows and Premiere handle 8Gb of RAM? I heard windows can only handle 4, not sure about Premiere. You would also find it difficult to boot windows in a RAID setup.

  • Alex Jusay

    October 12, 2006 at 1:05 pm in reply to: “export to tape” problem in PP 2.0

    Try this: in Premiere Capture window, settings, device control, make sure to identify your TRV900 in the DV device control options. Also, use your power supply to power your camera. Connect you firewire to your computer and to your camera, power on your camera, then open Premiere, then set the device settings.

    Hope that helps…

  • Alex Jusay

    October 11, 2006 at 4:15 am in reply to: BACKUP project

    thanx for the answers people, however, I dont trust a hard disk for backup. It’s the only mechanical thing in a computer, aside from the fans. If it can crash, it cant be trusted. James, how do you manage splitting your 20Gb trimmed project into several DVDs? Right now, I’m considering Nero Backup for this purpose, but it still kills a lot of time.

    Thanx again in advance!

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