LAFCPUG: HD Formats FAQs

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Can't capture HDV Video.

From Jude Cotter

If you're trying to capture HDV footage into FCP and all you get is a black screen, check if your deck or camera is set to 'i-Link Conversion'. This setting causes the deck or camera to down-convert HDV to DV automatically. If this is not what you want, turn it off. Also, make sure that your project is set up to capture HDV, not DV.


More detail from Christina A

With the Canon XH A1 you CANNOT change the settings that you need to change if the camera has the FireWire cable plugged into it.

  • 1. You first need to disconnect the FireWire cable, then put your camera on VCR/Playback mode.
  • 2. Click on the menu button and go to SIGNAL SETUP. (Since you do not have the FireWire cable plugged in, you can NOW change two important settings needed to import HD footage).
  • 3. Under SIGNAL SETUP, scroll down to PLAYBACK STD. Click on that and make sure the HDV is set. NOT the AUTO, it most likely will not import under AUTO. Once the HDV is set, you're half-way there.
  • 4. Next go back to SIGNAL SETUP and scroll down to HD DOWN-CONV and click on this. Make sure it is OFF. Once you set this, you're done.
  • 5. Go back to SIGNAL SETUP and check this settings to make sure they read:

- PLAYBACK STD HDV
- HD DOWN-CONV OFF

  • 6. You can now plug in your FireWire cable and you will see after a few seconds that these settings turn "gray" and you cannot change them.


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Understanding HD

From Jude Cotter

HD is a huge and still growing field. For currency of information (and because it’s easier!) we recommend the excellent HD FAQ at www.hdforindies.com


More information from Graeme Nattress

HD currently has two frame sizes - 1920x1080 and 1280x720. However, it's much more complex than that because of two things - some tape formats sub-sample and don't record the full rated resolution, and the nature of interlace.


HDCAM is nominally 1920x1080, and that's the size of image you get off the HDSDI ports, but it's stored on tape as 1440x1080, making it a subsampled format. HDCAM SR, the more expensive version of HDCAM does record the full 1920x1080


DVCProHD is 1280x1080 or 960x720 depending on version used. It subsamples further than HDCAM, but uses a lower bit rate too.


D5 is Panasonic's full raster 1920x1080 or 1280x720 format, but doesn't appear in any camcorder, but only as a deck for mastering to.


HDV comes in 1280x720 (ie full raster 720p) or 1440x1080 subsampled 1080i, like HDCAM.


Next there's the issue of interlace. 720p is always progressive, hence the p, and can range from 24 to 60 full frames per second depending on format. This makes every frame clean, and it compresses very well.


Most 1080 formats are 1080i. That means they're interlaced, so store each frame of 1920x1080 (or 1440x1080) as two fields of 1920x540. However, it's not as simple as that, as before each field is made it is vertically filtered which reduces it's resolution to about 70% of what it started with in an attempt to reduce the nasties of interlace flicker (twitter). This means that the measurable resolution of 1080i is something like 1920x700 or 1440x700 or so, so effectively a lot of pixels are wasted on blurred data, and given the issues of compressing interlaced video makes the overall video harder to compress.


Some 1080p formats are properly 1080p, and don't do interlace or it's vertical filtering and store the full resolution. These are mostly used for digital cinema, although it's still below what is normally considered the minium for cinema use - 2k.


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What's the best workflow for working with HDV?

From Graeme Nattress:

Although many people recommend getting out of HDV as soon as you can, what is usually best for HDV is to edit nativly. Yes - this works fine, as Apple have done a superb job on the codec to make it work right. Then, right at the end of editing, you change the timeline to uncompressed, re-render, and output to your high end HD deck. Quality is maintained as best as possible throughout the whole process, and you don't need a massive raid while editing, only at the end.


Dubbing to HDCAM or DVCProHD might simplify workflows for some people, but is detrimental to image quality (and resolution if you dub to DVCProHD) - dubbing to D5 or HDCAM SR might be fine for quality as they're very lightly compressed, but the others are not. HDV even stores colour with a better sampling than HDCAM!


Also look at:

Apple has very good "White Papers" (PDF) on HDV Workflow including a FAQ. Download it here : Native HDV Editing with Final Cut Pro 5

Also read Charlie White's tutorial titled "Native HDV on Final Cut Pro 5"

and Capturing HDV into ProRes via Firewire by Andrew Balis

and Capture HDV to ProRes in FCP? Over FireWire?! Yes!


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HDV won't play on an external monitor

From Michael Horton

HDV wont play out to an external monitor via Firewire. You need a Kona or Blackmagic Card. The Digital Cinema Desktop Preview is your only bet at this point.


Blackmagic Design has released a $249.00 HDMI card called the Intensity that will allow you to use your big screen television and/or video projector as a monitor by connecting to the built in HDMI-out. Find it at Decklink.com


To turn on Digital Cinema Desktop preview, go to View > Video Playback, and select the type of playback you want. Then select View > External > All Frames. To toggle this on and off, use apple - F12.


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Upconverting DV to DVCPRO HD with Compressor

From Shane Ross:

Who made a nice simple video tutorial which you can see here : Uprezzing DV to DVCPRO HD


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How does HDV work?

From Alister Robbie

HDV as a format is known as a long GOP format. GOP standing for Group Of Pictures. To understand the significance of this, we need to understand a GOP and a bit more about compression.


Let's start with intra-frame compression. This is compression inside a single frame - like a JPEG. It uses a bunch of algorithms to determine patterns and areas of similarity within the image so that it can ditch information without losing detail. From there we move to inter-frame compression where the compression algorithm starts comparing different frames within the clip to find similarities, and therefor ditch a bunch of data without losing detail.


When you use inter-frame compression, it uses three kinds of frames referred to as "I" "B" and "P" frames. Think of the 'I' frames as complete frames - nothing missing. 'P' frames contain only the data that has changed since the last frame, 'B' frames looks at the frame before and the frame afterwards to see what has changed in either direction, and only saves that. 'B' frames are useful for when you are shuttling backwards through the footage.


Now that we know what I, B & P frames are, we can look understand a GOP. A GOP is a group of I, B & P frames that form a small piece of video. For example, your HDV codec uses a "long GOP" structure which looks like "IBBPBBPBBPBBP" and it then repeats this structure again. The significance of this is that there is only one complete frame of information every 12 frames. This means that it takes up very little space, but will cause some issues which I will get into later.


Now we compare that to most other formats/codecs designed for editing such as DV, DVCPRO, Digital Betacam etc. These formats use what are referred to as "I frame only" compression which means that every frame is a complete frame. This takes up a lot more space, but is better for cutting.


If you want to make a cut in HDV, technically, you can only make a cut on an I (complete) frame. If you cut on a non-I frame, you will break the GOP structure, and there will be a group of frames that do not have an I frame to refer to. You will momentarily lose the signal when the clip is played back. Compare this to DV, where you can happily cut wherever you want, and you can start to see how issues might arise.


Given that people want to edit with HDV, Apple came up with few tricks to get around this issue. When you are cutting with HDV, Final Cut will allow you to make cuts on non-I frames. What the system does is in the background is at that cut point, it steps back to the last I frame and grabs that data, and adds it to the cut point so that all of the frames after that shot have an I frame to reference off. This happens everytime you make a cut in HDV.


This means that your original IBBPBBPBBPBBP GOP structure might now look something like IBBPBIBBPIBIBIPIIBBPI. This is now outside the boundaries of what your HDV deck will handle, and so once you are finished, and output, Final Cut Pro goes through a process where it re-orders all of the frames, and smooths things out. It makes sure that everything is in order and that it looks like the proper IBBPBBPBBPBBP.


If you change your sequence settings to another codec such as DVCPRO HD or 10bit Uncompressed (my favourite) it will force all of your long GOP HDV footage to become I frame only making it less processor intensive for your machine to work with.


For more information check out : The HDV Wiki


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How do I work with P2 media?

Here's a great simple video tutorial about P2 import by Shane Ross : Importing P2 into FCP


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4:3 (NTSC) Title/Action safe Template in a 16:9 frame

This is an HDTV Square pixels frame with 4:3 (NTSC) title / action safe guides on it. Drag it onto your desktop, import it into your FCP Project, lay it in your timeline over all clips & add the "Screen" Composite Mode to get rid of the black leaving the guides only.

From Joey "grafixjoe" Morelli

HDTV_sqpix_4by3_ttlsf.png


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After upgrading to FCP 6.0.2 Log & Transfer no longer works

Q: I just updated Final Cut Pro to 6.0.2 and LOG AND TRANSFER no longer works. What happened?

A: If you have Noise Industries FX Factory plugins, either v1.0.7 or v2.0, then this prevents LOG AND TRANSFER from working.

The solution is to download FX Factory version 2.0.1 from Noise Industries. It is a free upgrade to version 2.0 owners.

noiseindustries.com

Apple Knowledge Base article:
Final Cut Pro 6: Log and Transfer may fail if "FxFactory" is installed


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