Paul Williams
Forum Replies Created
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Well, right after adding my previous post, I found this. It appears to be a Matrox issue that they’ll try to fix in new releases (some day in the future).
https://forum.matrox.com/rtx2/viewtopic.php?p=35327&highlight=&sid=d47b4bd15dfb703041c4ea822ccf53f5
This is the first time I’ve used subclips. I think I’ll just go back to cutting up my original clips and using those pieces, instead of creating subclips from them.
Thanks.
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I know this is an older post, but I just ran across the same issue. I create subclips then put them in the timeline. When I change the speed of the subclip, different footage pops up. And if I alter the speed, it changes the footage each time.
I notice you have the Matrox Axio card. I have the Matrox RT.X2, along with Premiere Pro CS4, all with the latest updates (on a Quad Core Win XP SP3 machine). I wonder if Matrox is a factor. At some point, I’ll have to create a non-Matrox project, capture without using Matrox codecs and then recreate this issue and see if I get the same results.
Until then, have you seen a fix for this or a workaround?
Thanks.
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I should also mention that the DVD itself, will take up no more than 2.5 GB on the DVD disk, though I realize it can take up to double the amount of space on the hard drive to encode temporary files for the final burning sequence.
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Yes, I apologize. I failed to mention that. Drive G: is using the NTFS file system. Thanks.
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Thanks for the response. I know that I’ve had 16-bit audio setup under the VCR mode of my camcorder since the day I bought it. So, there must be another mechanism at play. However, I am going to try to record it first on mini DV tape (making sure the audio and vido are sync’d) and then capture from the mini DV tape. I will post the results as soon as possible. Thanks again for your help.
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Alright…last post before any more responses, I promise. I made a mistake…the file is 48 kHz. I was looking at the wrong file (working too fast). I played it on Windows Media Player and the audio and video are out of sync on that as well. The video is lagging behind the audio and it gets more and more out of sync as the file plays.
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I know I keep posting to my own question, but I did learn just now that the audio on my captured video is set to 44.1 kHz which would explain the problem. I don’t know how I missed that. Is there anyway that audio can be fixed/converted in Premiere? Also, how to I prevent this from happening in future analog to digital pass through captures (why does it record at 44.1 kHz)?
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Here’s an added note: I checked the manual on the Sony TRV50. It says that under the 16-bit audio setting, the audio records at Fs 48 kHz stereo. I have it set to the 16-bit setting and the PPro project is set to 48 kHz. Is it possible the analog audio signal is 32 kHz or below and is being passed through the camcorder as such (I have no idea on this one or even if analog audio would have those kHz settings). Thanks.
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I have thought about doing that and will give it a try and let you know the result. Also, I will check the camcorder’s audio settings to make sure they match with the capture and project settings on PPro. One side question on that…if the settings on the camcorder do not match those on PPro, wouldn’t that also cause sync problems with capturing straight from DV tapes as well? Thanks.