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  • Hahahahah,

    Yes, just like that…BUT BETTER. I seriously did not find the answer with my google skills. I guess dem skills are pretty shitty. But there it is now, thanks!

  • Osku Petteri

    January 12, 2019 at 5:31 pm in reply to: Mac mini 2018 thunderbolt BUS, how many are there?

    Thanks for the info!

  • Osku Petteri

    March 23, 2018 at 5:38 am in reply to: How to avoid media pending with cache?

    Did I say thousands? There will not be even hundreds. So two votes for AE, but no answer for the question. Maybe I’ll just take your hint, and make the photo sequences in AE.

  • Osku Petteri

    March 20, 2018 at 3:51 pm in reply to: How to avoid media pending with cache?

    Yes, this is true. In this project I’ve chosen to use Premiere only, because we have to combine video and a lot of audio tracks with these photos. So your answer won’t help, thanks anyways for the reply. Anyone else?

  • Thanks! I will take your advice and think about the 1080 versions again. PCI-ports will probably be the bottleneck, but my current GPU is an old AMD, so even one of the cheap 1060-version will speed it up if they work. I will try one of those first.

    Cheers mate!

  • Osku Petteri

    March 15, 2011 at 4:54 pm in reply to: cs5 mercury playback on an iMac ATI Radeon HD 4850

    Thanks for the info, more professional tools for me next time then…

  • Are you sure about this? 7D Manual says that for VIDEO your card should do at least 8MB/sec read and write.

    -Osku

  • Hello and many thanks for the answers,

    I’ve been on a vacation and just got back.

    QUOTE:
    That is not a rolling shutter issue. That is a frames issue. I’m assuming from your specs that the footage is 25fps and you are actually using it on a 25fps timeline as well. If there is an inconsistency in those two, you will have that kind of problem. The second shot is likely exhibiting problems because you said it was “speeded up a little bit in FCP.” That can be a big problem. Unless you are changing the speed by an exact multiple of the main timeline (such as doubling it, or halving it) you can run into problems because it can no longer be displayed frame-for-frame. By increasing its speed “a little” (we don’t know by what amount), your NLE is having to drop frames here and there to account for the time difference… thus giving you the jerky movement. I don’t know about FCP, but in Premiere you can turn on the “Frame Blending” feature for shots that are not at 100% speed which helps some.

    I am quite sure the issue was there before. It could be seen when watching the raw material. Yes Final Cut also has frame blending but it is usually really crap since it looks like it’s just blurring half of the frames in between.

    Correct it was 25fps on a 25fps timeline.

    Actually what i’m gonna do is go back to the material and check it without the speed changes. I’ll get back to you cause that seems quite reasonable solution.

    Thanks guys,

    -Osku-

  • Card used Sandisk Extreme 3 32gigs, the bitrate should be enough.

  • Thanks for quick answers!

    Lenses used:

    Tokina 11-16 2.8 no image stabilizer
    Sigma 17-50 2.8 no image stabilizer

    Yes saying it’s blinking is not the right term but the problem is real and I don’t know the term if it’s not rolling shutter related.

    Smooth Cam in FCP won’t help here. Or in Motion.

    Other succestions?

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