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Frame rate converter errorPosted by John K
I'm trying to convert some 720p60 clips to 23.98 for slow-motion effects. I open the clip in a new project, click the frame rate converter tool and try to export it out as a new 23.98 clip. It gets all the way through saving the clip and then gives me this error:
"An error occured during processing. Unable to conform source media." Not sure what's going on here; I found a posting on Creative Cow but it was more to do with embedded flags from Varicam footage, not sure it applies here. This was shot on an HVX and given to me on a drive (I didn't shoot or capture the material). Could there be something wrong with the source clip? JK _______________________________________ SCQT! Self-contained QuickTime ? pass it on!
<<<Could there be something wrong with the source clip?>>>
I'm suspicious every time somebody tries to convert between a non-NTSC friendly framerate (60, 30, 24) to an NTSC one (59.94, 29.97, 23.976) They either don't go well at all, you get stuttering frames every so often, or the length of the show changes. There are no other options that I know of. Were you expecting the length of the clips to change? Are you ready to deal with the sound sync issues? Are you *sure* they're 60.00 clips? You know the timecode has to change between Non Drop Frame to Drop Frame, right? You can't change the frame progression and keep the same time. Koz
Koz, let me clarify:
Everything is drop-frame. 720p60 uses a 59.94 time base, trying to go 720p24 which is 23.98. This is the technique for getting slow-motion clips out of HVX200 footage; you shoot at 720p60 and convert it to 720p24 using the frame rate converter tool. So I tried it again and while I keep getting this error it DOES create the new clip at 23.98, it just doesn't import it. But when I do import the new clip it's NOT in slow motion! It runs the same speed and length. I'm starting to think maybe they captured the P2 footage with the "remove duplicate frames" box checked. Hmmm. Is there any way I can tell by examining the footage? Shane, if you're around I'd love your input too. Maybe you've seen this? JK
Create a NEW PROJECT. Drag the clip into this project, THEN do the Frame Rate Conversion.
Little bug. www.shanerosseditor.com Listen to THE EDIT BAY Podcast on iTunes [itunes.apple.com]
Hmmm...duplicate one of the clips (on the drive, not in FCP) and then use CINEMA TOOLS to conform it to 23.98. That slows it down too...but destructively.
www.shanerosseditor.com Listen to THE EDIT BAY Podcast on iTunes [itunes.apple.com]
Got me. Should work, but isn't. Hate it when that happens.
www.shanerosseditor.com Listen to THE EDIT BAY Podcast on iTunes [itunes.apple.com]
One note here that wasn't addressed in the thread. There are two ways to shoot at 720p60 (59.94). Either you're shooting 24p or 30p and its recorded in a 720p60 format (either HVX or Varicam), or it was shot at 60fps (variable frame rate). These are two completely different animals and unfortunately there is no way to tell by looking at the file which it was (not that I know of).
If it was 24p (or 30p), then you can not use this footage with the frame rate converter. Its not really 60fps, its got dummy frames embedded in it. If it was shot at 60fps, then the footage can be used with the frame rate converter. I'm not sure if this is what's going on here, but I thought I would throw in the feedback just in case. Andrew Balis Lead Final Cut Pro Instructor www.moviola.com
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