Pietro Impagliazzo
August 13th, 2008, 12:27 AM
Hey guys, I will edit something on my Premiere PC.
But later I need to take this to a Mac Pro.
The guy told me all I need are the .EDL file and the clips.
But the clips (HDV) were captured on PC with HDV Split, hence .m2t.
Does FCP ingest the .m2ts natively? Do they need to be transcoded?
If so, will FCP do so or I need to do that myself?
I found this: http://www.dvinfo.net/conf/showthread.php?t=96929&highlight=.m2t
I can download MPEG Streamclip, however it only works If I buy Apple Quicktime MPEG-2 Playback Component.
Of course I can use Premiere to convert the files to a .MOV, but what codec should I use? What bitrate?
Thanks.
David Foster
August 13th, 2008, 02:00 PM
I'm not sure if you require the to purchase the mpeg-2 component or not. If you have Final Cut Studio, you have Quicktime Pro also, which I believe has mpeg-2 component installed. I've used Streamclip many times. I do not recall ever having to buy an additional component to make m2t's convert properly.
It's worth a shot.
David
Martin Labelle
August 13th, 2008, 10:20 PM
I do M2t, and convert by streamclip.
I confirm you don't need to buy a component.
Usually I make a m2t from my timeline but don't forgot to select(transport) or it will be a
m2v(whitout sound).
After puting in streamclip I choose convert as mp4
Tim Dashwood
August 14th, 2008, 06:00 AM
A new app designed to convert m2t to Quicktime HDV with TC will be available shortly from Divergent-Media.
See this post for more info: http://www.dvinfo.net/conf/jvc-pro-hd-acquisition-systems/127888-m2t-quicktime-hdv-wrapper-coming-soon.html
Robert Lane
August 14th, 2008, 09:54 AM
Pietro,
If you're importing camera-raw clips from tape you don't need any additional software than FCP6; you can import your clips as native HDV or the preferred workflow which is ProRes 422, then edit your sequence normally.
If you're transferring an entire timeline and need to retain all the cuts/filters/timecode then you'd need Automatic Duck to make the transfer to FCP successful.
If you're simply outputting clips that don't require further editing you can output a Quicktime file from the Premiere timeline and import that as just another video asset into FCP.
One of those methods should get you exactly what you need.
Pietro Impagliazzo
August 15th, 2008, 03:10 AM
I do M2t, and convert by streamclip.
I confirm you don't need to buy a component.
Usually I make a m2t from my timeline but don't forgot to select(transport) or it will be a
m2v(whitout sound).
After puting in streamclip I choose convert as mp4
Maybe you're using a Mac?
I just can't do it and a message pops up saying I have to buy.
Pietro,
If you're importing camera-raw clips from tape you don't need any additional software than FCP6; you can import your clips as native HDV or the preferred workflow which is ProRes 422, then edit your sequence normally.
If you're transferring an entire timeline and need to retain all the cuts/filters/timecode then you'd need Automatic Duck to make the transfer to FCP successful.
If you're simply outputting clips that don't require further editing you can output a Quicktime file from the Premiere timeline and import that as just another video asset into FCP.
One of those methods should get you exactly what you need.
Won't an EDL that links to the originals do?
Thanks for the replies.
Greg Boston
August 15th, 2008, 05:11 AM
That's true Pietro. On Windows, you will need to have the mpeg2 component.
-gb-
Robert Lane
August 15th, 2008, 08:10 AM
Won't an EDL that links to the originals do?
Thanks for the replies.
My gut says "no" but truthfully I don't know. We've always used Automatic Duck to transfer unfinished sequences between NLE's or platforms. I don't know if Premiere uses the same EDL structure that FCP or Avid does. You can always try it and if it doesn't work use the other suggested workflows. You might also have the mod move this thread to the Premiere forum since there are more specialists there who have done this type of transfer more often than on the Mac forum.
Pietro Impagliazzo
November 5th, 2008, 09:01 PM
Now Im' on this situation:
I filmed a short film and captured the tapes here on my PC generating lots of split .m2ts from HDV Split.
My friends captured on a Mac.
They are going to start editing.
How am I suppose to get the finished project to CC on AE+Magic Bullet later?
Why doesn't FC just read the .m2ts? What's so hard about reading native HDV stuff? It's a widely used standard for god's sake.
If they were editing on Premiere I'd just open the project later on AE, with no hustle.
Exporting uncompressed on FC for me to CC on AE would be a good solution?
I'm sorry If I'm a little jumpy... But it's the first time these workflow issues happen to me.
And I won't use Color because I'm not experienced/comfortable with it.