![]() Thanks for the suggestions everyone, I really appreciate it. I will try this method and report back if it at least fixes any synching issues. The only downside to that is if there were camera start/stops but it all took place within the same scene or if you wanted it all in one clip and it splits it up, but I suppose if that's the only way it will work at this point- it's worth giving a shot. I really like organization and capturing specific sections or clips to log myself, but it seems that trying a whole tape capture with scene detection seems to be the only solution to try at the moment. What is most frustrating to me is that this used to work perfectly this way and I guess I just don't understand what has changed or what I'm doing wrong at the moment. So it has been a very long time since I've had to do anything with tapes and I realize a lot of changed in Premiere as well as Macs, Operating Systems, etc. I've been working with DSLR and raw footage recorded onto cards these days, the only reason I am re-visiting these tapes is because a friend passed away and I have taken the liberty of putting together a small documentary for the family. Any suggestions or advice someone can help me with would be a lifesaver. ![]() Surely there has got to be a way to capture in premiere as back in the day I have captured over 1000 hours using this exact same method, camera, tapes! I feel like it’s maybe some type of time code issue or setting I have incorrectly that is causing this. dv file format which is not supported by the latest version of Premiere or DaVinci Resolve and I don’t want to convert them to MOV because I’m trying to do a lossless workflow for archive purposes. I found another 3rd party app called Vidi that captures the entire tape perfectly with no sync issues the entire time, but it can only do so in the. The tapes are all 16 bit 48K audio, 24p, and my project reflects that. I am doing a log and capture method in the shortest scene by scene capture that I can, but it seems the longer I try to capture the more the audio slowly begins to drift out of sync. I am on the latest iMac with the newest version of OSX. I did a capture a few months ago from an old Canon ZR200 camcorder using a FireWire port on a PC and Premiere CC 2017 with only minor issues related to unwisely using LP mode to record and having the DV transport error out once in a while as a result.I have several MiniDV tapes I am trying to capture from a Panasonic DVX100 into latest version of Premiere CC, I have also tried in Premiere 2017. Also remember that the camera has to be ON and usually in the PLAY mode rather than RECORD mode to be usable by the computer. On the PC simply hitting F5 will bring up the Capture panel. Premiere Pro still has a Capture facility which can be used to handle DV camcorders. Are you using some sort of an adapter? Some DV cams come with USB ports as well but they can’t be used for transferring DV tape info to the computer usually those cams have an SD card slot and the USB interface allows reading the SD card only. You need a real FireWire port to connect an old DV camcorder to a computer. You can’t stream DV through an adapter meant to connect storage devices the protocols are completely different and won’t translate. ![]() I can only assume you’re using a Mac that doesn’t have a true FireWire port. DV camcorders generally use FireWire (aka IEEE 1394) ports and a special DV-specific protocol to transfer video and Macs started dumping FireWire around 2008.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |