Thanks. I had assumed that shooting at 24p was the issue, since the iPhone was most definitely not shooting at 24p. The latest news is that there is an off chance I was given the wrong sound take. I don't think that is the case, but my friend is now trying to get the other take from the iPhone owner.
--- In Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com, "Job ter Burg (L2B)" <Job_L2@...> wrote:
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>
> You should not have any sync issues, since both devices were running at realtime. The audio doesn't have a framerate (at best a TC rate), just a sample rate. Taking 48K sound between different projects does nothing to its speed or length, nor should it: a second consists of 48000 samples, no matter the framerate of the picture.
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> So they should line up, unless either or both of the devices aren't sync accurate. So if they don't, I'm afraid that that is the answer.
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> On 25 okt. 2012, at 05:45, "fallendown79" <fallendown79@...> wrote:
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> > A friend asked a favor - she shot a video with a Nikon D800 at 24p and had a singer hold an iPhone and record her voice to the voice memo app for the sound. Could i please marry the two?
> >
> > They seem to be hopelessly out of sync. I tried creating a 29.97 project for the sound, a 23 for the picture, then opening the bin from that project in the project for the sound and cutting the picture into the sound timeline, thinking Media Composer (5.5.3) might make the correction. It did not. Playing with speed is arbitrary and useless, I think.
> >
> > I also tried the "IgnoreQTRate True" command to import the video, after I'd stripped the sound off of the file. That shortened the 3 minute clip by about 30 seconds so that now it was too short for the sound.
> >
> > Any idea how this can be solved?
>
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