John Hampster
September 2nd, 2004, 07:27 AM
I'm working with Final Cut Pro HD 4.5 and an XL1. Whenever I log all my clips and start the batch capture, I have to sit next to the camera to make sure it doesn't forget to stop at the proper in point. At least a good 50% of the time I have to manually stop it or rewind it to the proper in point location. This gets extremely frustrating and time consuming. I can't walk away from it or it won't get half my clips, and it's only going to get worse when I have to start archiving projects and relogging the footage when further adjustments need to be made on. Any suggestions? anyone else have this issue?
Matt Elias
September 2nd, 2004, 12:11 PM
I've never had this problem before. Have you tried capturing w/ another cam or deck? How old is your mac and XL1?
If you're going to be capturing/archiving a lot, then you may want to invest in a deck.
Jeff Donald
September 2nd, 2004, 01:00 PM
Are there a lot of time code breaks?
Josh Mellicker
September 4th, 2004, 11:10 AM
You could try capturing a whole tape at once, then "logging" the big clip from your hard drive, then media manage the desired clips (if they are a small percentage of the tape) to free up hard drive space.
John Hampster
September 7th, 2004, 07:09 AM
I'm using a brand new G5 Power Mac, and I believe the XL1 is only a year or two old. It's a company camera so i don't know its whole history. There are no timecode breaks when the problem arises, but I'll give it a shot with my own camera and see what happens. It would be nice to get a deck, but I don't think the boss is going to spring for one anytime soon.
Jeff Donald
September 7th, 2004, 07:54 AM
If it's an XL1 (not XL1s) then its at least 3 years old. Of course it could have been in a dealers inventory or used as a demo for some time after the XL1s was introduced in 2001.
Laurence Maher
September 8th, 2004, 12:31 AM
I was told to turn off the "delete capture on time code breaks". Truthfully can't remember if it worked or not. Did it in the middle of an edit marathon, via manual capture.