George Bours
August 28th, 2007, 06:29 PM
We shot our documentary feature with the Sony V1U camera using Tape and the Sony HVR-60 HD recorder as back up. There are some days that we only shot tape, some days where we only shot drive and some days we used both.
I am encountering a sync issue. Here is my workflow.
Capture Sony V1U tape using NEO HD applying 3-2 pulldown on ingest. Setting are per Cineforms website recommendations for the Sony V1U. It is set for QT .mov files and automatically converting to Cineform Intermediate files.
I then apply the same setting to the .mt2 files from the drive. I took a shoot day where we shot both tape and drive and created cineform quicktimes on both. I then moved the files to the FCP (v6.x) system we are going to be cutting on. I found the audio on the Quicktime files captured from tape to be about 1 frame early from picture. I then synced up the same shot from the drive material that was converted and the audio was 2 frames earlier than the tape material and 3 frames early against picture.
There seems to be a problem with converting the .mt2 files to the cineform intermediate.
Please advise.
Thanks,
George
I am encountering a sync issue. Here is my workflow.
Capture Sony V1U tape using NEO HD applying 3-2 pulldown on ingest. Setting are per Cineforms website recommendations for the Sony V1U. It is set for QT .mov files and automatically converting to Cineform Intermediate files.
I then apply the same setting to the .mt2 files from the drive. I took a shoot day where we shot both tape and drive and created cineform quicktimes on both. I then moved the files to the FCP (v6.x) system we are going to be cutting on. I found the audio on the Quicktime files captured from tape to be about 1 frame early from picture. I then synced up the same shot from the drive material that was converted and the audio was 2 frames earlier than the tape material and 3 frames early against picture.
There seems to be a problem with converting the .mt2 files to the cineform intermediate.
Please advise.
Thanks,
George