Forum Replies Created

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  • Andy Kralik

    April 15, 2021 at 6:36 pm in reply to: syncing timecode on camera and field mixer

    I use the scratch track with a hand clap or slate to sync clips in post. The best and most affordable wireless time sync solution for shoots and post is the Tentacle Sync available at B&H Photo. Excellent system IMHO. https://tentaclesync.com

  • Andy Kralik

    November 21, 2020 at 2:34 pm in reply to: FS7 record of actions taken

    I accept Brett’s reply. Talking directly to Sony first would certainly be my first attempt at a possible solution before downloading anything.

  • Andy Kralik

    November 21, 2020 at 1:27 pm in reply to: FS7 record of actions taken

    This has never happened to me, so I can’t guarantee the solution. I have heard many times in the past that lost footage on an XQD card and many card based media can be recovered as long as it hasn’t been written on since the last formatting. There are several companies and softwares available. Try it on another card. This one is free. Use at your own risk.

    http://rcysoft.com/card-recovery/xqd-memory-card-recovery.html

  • Andy Kralik

    March 30, 2020 at 3:43 pm in reply to: Open HEVC file?

    I’m not suggesting you download the software they are recommending. I don’t know anything about it. I think the article has solutions you can try first. Let me know how it goes.

    25+ year roller coaster ride in production and post production. The most fun in my life.

  • Andy Kralik

    March 30, 2020 at 3:37 pm in reply to: Open HEVC file?

    OK, now we are getting somewhere. We know the files actually does work.
    Assuming you have the latest and licensed Adobe Premiere Pro CC on your system,
    here is a link to amnestying informative website that I found that may have help with your dilemma concerning HVEC files.

    https://www.videoproc.com/troubleshoot-adobe/premiere-pro-hevc-codec-missing-error.htm

    25+ year roller coaster ride in production and post production. The most fun in my life.

  • Andy Kralik

    March 30, 2020 at 11:32 am in reply to: Open HEVC file?

    I guess I should have been more clear. I would like you to download and try VLC and see if the HEVC file you have now even plays. I’m using some forensics here to get you to a solution. If the HEVC file you have now doesn’t play in VLC, then the HEVC file may not have been ripped properly from the BluRay. From there we’ll go to step 2 and try and use VLC to rip the BluRay to another uncompressed format.

    25+ year roller coaster ride in production and post production. The most fun in my life.

  • Andy Kralik

    March 29, 2020 at 9:37 pm in reply to: Open HEVC file?

    I Don’t know. Like I said, “I haven’t had to use VLC in awhile”. Codecs have become more stable and cross platform standardized these last 10 years.
    Here’s a quick read from Wikipedia on VLC. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/VLC_media_player#Output_formats

    25+ year roller coaster ride in production and post production. The most fun in my life.

  • Andy Kralik

    March 29, 2020 at 3:41 pm in reply to: Open HEVC file?

    If you haven’t already, Try VLC (free download) to rip the blu-Ray to what you want. While I have not used VLC for some time, it was always my go to software to do file conversions when a clients video file wouldn’t work on my Mac.

    25+ year roller coaster ride in production and post production. The most fun in my life.

  • Andy Kralik

    December 19, 2019 at 3:32 am in reply to: Slow motion shots keep pausing after exporting.

    Your post stated you converted the 60P to 24p before you placed it in the timeline and then exported again at 24P. I’m stating you don’t have to convert the 60P footage for the original edit. Don’t let Premiere convert the footage when you insert into your timeline. Keep it as 60P in the 24P original edit sequence, then export the entire entire sequence as 24P.

    25+ year roller coaster ride in production and post production. The most fun in my life.

  • Andy Kralik

    December 19, 2019 at 1:52 am in reply to: Slow motion shots keep pausing after exporting.

    60p media on a 24p timeline will just work.

    All instances of 60P media on any 24P timeline will play at 40% slo-mo. i..e. 1 for 1. 60fps footage maps perfectly to the 24fps timeline for the smoothest slow-mo.

    Your final output file should work now.

    25+ year roller coaster ride in production and post production. The most fun in my life.

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