The other solution is to turn on "ignoreQTrate" in the console and do a file import. You will get a clip that is representing every frame of the original file at your current projects fps, so will play back at 50 percent speed if it is 48fps in a 24fps project. You also don't get audio.
I advise you import at full quality needed for finishing as this will not relink back to original footage for online unless you import the whole file again at the online res. You will still get a frame for frame relationship if importing 48fps into 23.98fps project, but the true speed will be a tad over 50%.
Also note, if bringing in 48fps via AMA into a 24fps project, it will throw out the extra frames and give you a 24fps file, which will run at 100 percent. In this example I recommend the transcode in a true 24fps file, if the source is true 48fps, to avoid inconsistent frames being dropped.
The resulting file also will not relink back to the original full res master file, and you will not have any reference to the original so you should once again transcode it at the res you want for finishing.
Dave Hogan
Burbank, CA
On Tuesday, September 30, 2014 11:39 PM, "Michael Brockington mbrock321@gmail.com [Avid-L2]" <Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
Problem with number 2 is that there's no Avid project with a 48 fps framerate.
If you don't care about audio (as is often the case with slomo footage), you can use something like Cinema Tools to restamp the 5D .mov files as 23.98 (or whatever your native project rate is), then AMA the resulting file and transcode normally. You might have to strip off any audio tracks before you can conform to a different frame-rate in Cinema Tools, though.
Cheers,
--Michael
If you don't care about audio (as is often the case with slomo footage), you can use something like Cinema Tools to restamp the 5D .mov files as 23.98 (or whatever your native project rate is), then AMA the resulting file and transcode normally. You might have to strip off any audio tracks before you can conform to a different frame-rate in Cinema Tools, though.
Cheers,
--Michael
On 2014-09-30, 6:39 PM, tcurren@aol.com [Avid-L2] wrote:
When you transcode off frame rate AMA footage Avid warns you that it will change the frame rate to the project rate. And it does. That is now baked in.
There's two ways around it I know of.
1; If the AMA mounted file is an Avid supported codec, consolidate to your drive and it doesn't get converted.
if not
2: CReate an Avid project at the source clip frame rate. AMA mount and transcode the clips. Open that bin in your original program. You now have an Avid clip that is the original frame rate with a motion effect applied when you cut the clip in the timeline. That motion effect can be promoted and adjusted.
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Posted by: Dave Hogan <mactvman@yahoo.com>
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