Scott
Forum Replies Created
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Scott
April 26, 2005 at 1:04 am in reply to: Footage from DVX shot 24pa, appears to still be interlaced when edited.Premiere Pro detects the “cadence” to remove the extra frames. If by stopping and starting during the recording process this can throw off the “pattern” of original and inserted frames. Does all the captured footage exibit the same problem? Or is it just on certain parts? I would suggest re-capruring a small protion of the problem area (with no “cuts” in it) and see if the problem persists.
Anyone else have any ideas?
Scott
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To answer your question, I would suggest leaving it as 1 partition. You could put it as seperate partitions, but there is really no advantage (other than keeping track of files) to do it this way. Fragmentation is really not a problem either. I have a toshiba p25-s520 laptop and it runs without a hitch. In 6 months I have not seen any pauses or dropouts from the HD. If you do have the money, a external is a great to have. With it you can use the system drive for the conformed audio files.
Scott
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All you should have to do is press the enter key and wait for it to finish rendering.
Scott
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The Advance shooting mode does away with the frame with fields from adjoining frames.
This site does a great job explaining the differences.
Scott
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Ok, it never fails, as soons as I click post I think of something else.
You can also import your 24p footage into a 30i project and let premiere render preview files for it. They will be ready to go as soon as it’s done.
Scott
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I would suggest exporting all of your 24p footage as 30i and then import both the components into a new 30i project. From here it should be smooth sailing.
Scott
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Hi Erly,
When I first installed premiere pro this problem showed up when I tried to burn the timeline to DVD. Premiere defaults to a progressive video preset unless told to do otherwise. Make sure that you choose a preset that does not have the word “progressive” in it.
One thing I did not see in your post is if you could play back video (to the camera thru firewire) to a tv and still have the same problem. If it’s messed up with this configuration then it might be something else.
Scott
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Yes. Capture with any camera you like.
Scott
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I Almost forgot…
If the audio is still out of sync after importing go into the “speed/duration” menu (right click on the audio track) and change the audio duration to match the video duration. It might take a couple of tries to get it exact.
Scott
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I might regret posting this – (please don’t hate me), but try importing seperate audio and video into a Premiere Pro 1.5 system and export them as a combined (regular DV file – or quicktime) and then re-import them into iDVD. Premiere Pro seems to deal with unlocked audio very nicely. I have yet to have problems with mixing locked and unlocked camera audio on long projects.
I know that this does not solve the issue, but might provide a workaround in the meantime.
Scott