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Premiere can handle h.264, but is it wise?
I wanted to know what you guys thought about editing natively with H.264 on the timeline.
I've always transcoded it to either ProRes or similar and i've read that is a process of "unpacking" the footage, as H.264 is really a presentation codec. Should i still do this? Or is there no loss of quality when editing natively with h264? Thanks! Neil |
Re: Premiere can handle h.264, but is it wise?
Hi
I save some of my footage in H264 - and I see no quality loss when using that later in the timeline. Nor do I see any problems for Premiere in handling the files. |
Re: Premiere can handle h.264, but is it wise?
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Once you start using dynamic link and sending files to AE, even a high end computer and the latest software is going to feel the pain though. At that point, I'd want to seriously consider transcoding to a more edit-friendly codec. But I'm not there yet ;-) |
Re: Premiere can handle h.264, but is it wise?
Thanks guys,
That's a really good point about sending to After Effects, although Premiere seems absolutely fine when just doing rough cuts with no effects using H264...when we start layering grades/effects on top it seems to lag. Maybe a transcode would just be a catch-all good option then |
Re: Premiere can handle h.264, but is it wise?
If editing H.264 natively is stable enough for you, there's no reason to transcode. However, the "unpacking" refers to the GOP (Group Of Pictures) because H.264 is not intended as an I-frame only codec. This is what can bring compute power to its knees.
I wrote some more about it here What You Should Know About CODEC and Transcoding | DearCinema.com Short version - if you can edit GOP like a warm knife through butter then there's no particular argument to transcode other than if it brings your system to its knees or crashes your NLE. |
Re: Premiere can handle h.264, but is it wise?
Im still switching from FCP so am new to PP, but I am having no trouble at all with the original 5DII files. The only AE work I've done is the Warp Stabilizer effect and it renders fast, works very well. On the other hand, on the same computer, FCP won't play H.264 worth a damn. Computer is a new 8 core Mac Pro with the standard video card.
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Re: Premiere can handle h.264, but is it wise?
We too are switching from FCP to Premiere Pro CS5.5 & are very pleased to be able to edit native 5DII files without transcoding. Our Mac Pros do indeed edit these files "like a warm knife through butter" & it is very pleasing to see that when we do any rendering or export the final video that PP maxes out all eight cores.
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Re: Premiere can handle h.264, but is it wise?
to separate things -
FX which can be rendered via CUDA / nVidia GPU will help you a lot in taking the load of the CPU's otherwise you can generally edit native and not worry about it |
Re: Premiere can handle h.264, but is it wise?
Yes, remember that CUDA does not help h.264 decoding, It relies solely on CPU power.
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Re: Premiere can handle h.264, but is it wise?
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