Xdcam Hd 422 Codec Premiere Cc Multicam
So I recieved files in: XDCAM HD 1080 422 i60 50mb CBR 1920x1080 - 1888x1062 My understanding is that XDCAM is supported natively in PPro, however, when I try to import into Premiere or add to Media Encoder I recieve error: 'Codec missing or unavailable'. Fixed a crash issue when exporting to XDCAM HD 422. Jan 21, 2015 Export XDCam 422 codec with a.mov extension on PC - Creative COW's user support.
I was DITing on a pilot yesterday, the production asked me to sound sync the rushes and transcode them to a format suitable for Avid, so I contacted the post house looking after the edit for a specific codec; they specified XDCAM HD.MXF files. So I used Premier Pro to do the sync and media encoder for the export. But today the post house are saying they can't view the files in Avid, they they are 'Premier Pro'.MXF's. Annoyingly I've only been able to speak to the account executive that deals with the production company I've been working for and not the Tech who's been ingesting the files, So I've not been able to get any more details about the issue. But personally this sounds like nonsense, I was under the impression that an.MXF was a.MXF and that the software used to create it had no bearing on the finished file, or am I wrong?
Thanks in advance for your help- First of all, I'm a serious noob, so please bear with me. I have Premier Pro CC on a Windows 8 machine, and need to edit video that I recorded for a client. I used a rented video camera that outputs to AVCHD format. When I import these clips into PP-CC, I get the following warning: The video I'm trying to edit has 2 channel stereo audio. When I add the video to the timeline, there is no audio track and when I play it, no audio is heard. Additionally, when I play the clip through Windows Media Player the audio can be heard.
Any help here?? So I'm running Premiere Pro CC 2014 (8.0) on OSX Mountain Lion (10.8.5), using CUDA acceleration and everything works fine except for one thing: when I do a multicam edit I switch the program monitor into the multicam mode as usual. However, during playback I'm dropping frames with the video (audio playback is normal). Download wiro sableng format pdf lengkap judul.
This happens with playback at any resolution, even down to 1/8. Since I've retained the previous version of Premiere Pro (7.0), I've checked it's multicam playback and it's completely normal at full res. After going through and matching all settings in 8.0 to 7.0 I'm really at a loss with this problem, any ideas?
In AE one sets the (field) Interpretation for footage at the source. In Final Cut 7 there is a Deinterlace filter that can be applied en masse to clips in the timeline. Neither option seems applicable in Premiere. If I have interlace source material and a delivery spec for Progressive, it is satisfactory to edit a native seq (interlace) then on export set it to Progressive?
Or does one have to additionally go into Field Options for every clip in the TL and set it for 'Always Deinterlace'? If it were the easy option 1 I would be surprised why so many on-line explanations suggest the time-consuming 2nd? Thanks in advance, Paul.