Forum Replies Created

  • Sagar Sangani

    January 25, 2012 at 4:52 pm in reply to: XDCAM EX and Premiere Pro nightmare

    Thank you, Tim. Your post really helps me put things in to perspective. All this time I was thinking my hardware was insufficient to handle these clips.

    I have 3 projects that I am editing in total. Each of these folders are named “1” “2” “3”. Each of this folders have another folder BPAV. The BPAV folder has CLPR, TAKR, Mediapro.xml, and Cueup.xml. In addition to that, there is a folder named “General”

    The only question here is how the media was transferred. I would have to get in touch with the videographer but the sequence of the files and folders seem to be intact.

    I will try to reinstall PPro if anything, but I have the authentic Production Premium suite and all the softwares are running on latest versions (PPro @ 5.0.3)

  • Sagar Sangani

    January 23, 2012 at 4:36 pm in reply to: XDCAM EX and Premiere Pro nightmare

    The original video is 1920 x 1080, 59.94 fps and it has 4 audio channels.

    My sequence is XDCAM EX 1080i60.

    I haven’t done any rendering or editing yet. This problem is so severe that when I change windows or save the project after dragging the clips on the timeline, PPro freezes.

    I believe I was given the files straight off the card. I do have the CLPR and BPAV folders. They are in mp4 format and I put them on the timeline from media browser.

  • Sagar Sangani

    January 22, 2012 at 5:51 pm in reply to: XDCAM EX and Premiere Pro nightmare

    I tried moving the project over in a SSD drive. It was 120 GB and the project was under 30gb.

  • Sagar Sangani

    January 22, 2012 at 1:05 am in reply to: XDCAM EX and Premiere Pro nightmare

    Jeff, I have already tried this work around before I posted on here but that didn’t solve the problem. Any more ideas?

  • Sagar Sangani

    January 21, 2012 at 4:38 pm in reply to: XDCAM EX and Premiere Pro nightmare

    Hi Jeff,

    Thank you for the response. Yes, I have a whole separate drive for videos. Nothing get’s stored in the C drive, including cache files.

    When I was doing my research, I came across a post where you’d have to go to Premiere Pro’s folder and open the .txt file (not sure which one it was) to see if your card was added to list of supported cards. I am guessing this is not the same information.

    I will look in to this once I get home as I am currently at work. I hope this will fix the issue.

  • Sagar Sangani

    July 14, 2010 at 9:44 pm in reply to: Manually install codecs?

    Wow, really? Thanks for the info.

    I’ll stick to QuickTime format.

  • Sagar Sangani

    July 14, 2010 at 2:03 am in reply to: Manually install codecs?

    Thanks, Dave.

    Maybe I should have been a little clear about my project. You see, I am trying to render an animated motion menu which is in AE. All the other videos that I edit in Premiere Pro are exported with Media Encoder.

    The reason why I select MPEG is because all the HDV files are in mpeg format and I think it would be better to be consistent throughout the project. I’ve exported in AVI better using Media Encoder and it has been very quick on CS5 64bit Win7.

    I am have previously tried to render in MOV and it has taken a significant amount of time.

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