View Full Version : P2 and CS4/CS5
Jon Doughtie May 5th, 2011, 08:18 AM First time poster here; hello everyone.
I use a Panasonic HPX-370 with Avid Media Composer at the day job. I am looking into a Panasonic HPX-170 for my church, where we currently edit on Adobe CS4 platform. We will be upgrading to CS5. Initially we'll just shoot DVCPro50, but that will change to HD in the near-term future.
Is the Adobe workflow as simple as copying the MXF files to the project edit hard drive and doing an import in your Premiere project? Or are there a few more details?
Initially I would be connecting the camera via USB 2.0. The CS5 machine with have a SmartCard reader on board, of a flavor the Panasonic drivers will like.
Any thoughts or "tribal knowledge" I should have as I investigate this?
If you know of previous threads that would help, feel free to share links as well.
Thanks for any assistance you might offer!
Jon
Jon Doughtie May 13th, 2011, 09:50 AM Bump - - - No one using a P2/Adobe workflow?
Gary Nattrass May 14th, 2011, 03:53 AM Hi Jon I use FCP so I am not an adobe expert but from what I understand CS5 ia needed for AVC Intra and will work fine with P2, more details about CS4 operation are here: ftp://ftp.panasonic.com/pub/Panasonic/business/provideo/whitepapers/WP_Using_P2HD_with_Adobe_CS4.pdf
I did do a job last year and we shot AVC Intra 50 720p and it could be played and edited direct with CS5, it seemed to do a transfer process like in FCP in the background so that all the media ended up on the clients hard drives from the cloned P2 cards that were on my USB drive.
Hope this helps and I did do some tests in CS5 to check it last year and from what I recall it all seemed to work OK to me and virtually identical to my FCP workflow.
Ralph McCloud May 15th, 2011, 07:48 AM I use CS5 with HPX370. Just drag the MXF files on your hard drive, import into Premiere and you're off! It's that simple.
I use the Panasonic AJ-PCD2 card reader to import.
First time poster here; hello everyone.
I use a Panasonic HPX-370 with Avid Media Composer at the day job. I am looking into a Panasonic HPX-170 for my church, where we currently edit on Adobe CS4 platform. We will be upgrading to CS5. Initially we'll just shoot DVCPro50, but that will change to HD in the near-term future.
Is the Adobe workflow as simple as copying the MXF files to the project edit hard drive and doing an import in your Premiere project? Or are there a few more details?
Initially I would be connecting the camera via USB 2.0. The CS5 machine with have a SmartCard reader on board, of a flavor the Panasonic drivers will like.
Any thoughts or "tribal knowledge" I should have as I investigate this?
If you know of previous threads that would help, feel free to share links as well.
Thanks for any assistance you might offer!
Jon
Jon Doughtie May 17th, 2011, 11:36 AM Thanks guys, that is terrific information.
Ralph, any reason I couldn't simply connect the camera USB 2.0 and do the file transfer?
Jon
Gary Nattrass May 17th, 2011, 02:16 PM Thanks guys, that is terrific information.
Ralph, any reason I couldn't simply connect the camera USB 2.0 and do the file transfer?
Jon
Yes you can just connect the camera, my first tests were done this way then we also checked it with a usb drive of the cloned cards from the camera.
The nice thing is that you can start editing straight away and CS/5 does the transfer as a background task, or maybe not as that takes away my teabreak time!!!
Art White May 19th, 2011, 07:53 AM Hello Jon,
I use the HPX 170 with Adobe CS 5. I'm rather new too, but I import the MXF files by card reader then import them directly into Premiere by the Project panel. I'm a very basic person, so if I find something that works, I stick with it. I have not experimented any other way. I shoot 720 24p. I have used nothing but Adobe Premiere since 2000. Almost gave up on Adobe in the early years but CS 5 and P2 cards are the way to go for me now.
David Jimerson June 6th, 2011, 10:42 AM Copy over the entire Contents folder from the card, not just the MXF files. Leave the folder structure intact.
Then use Media Browser to navigate to the Contents folder, and all the footage will appear with thumbnails and User Clip Names, if assigned.
That is the best way to import.
Workflow is more fully explained in the white paper:
http://wwwimages.adobe.com/www.adobe.com/content/dam/Adobe/en/products/premiere/pdfs/cs5-production-premium-p2-p2hd-wfg.pdf
I can vouch for it, because I wrote it. :)
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