Richard Cavell
May 7th, 2012, 07:36 PM
Hi.
I'm capturing raw footage on a Sony EX1. It's mostly 1080i, 25 fps. I then import the footage as XDCAM EX codec within a .mov wrapper, using XDCAM Transfer Utility. The footage takes up about 20 gigs/hour, which is a bit too much for my liking. Also, I've just found out that the Windows version of Adobe Premiere Pro won't accept this file format.
I don't want to store the footage as the raw BPAV files. I want to store the footage in some sort of format that can be played by anyone. That's why I'm not using the Browser utility, or importing the files directly into FCP/Premiere.
What format should I be using for archival? I don't want to lose quality, and I want it to be universally recognized and playable by as many computers as possible. What about using handbrake to encode it using lossless h264 as .m4v files?
Richard
I'm capturing raw footage on a Sony EX1. It's mostly 1080i, 25 fps. I then import the footage as XDCAM EX codec within a .mov wrapper, using XDCAM Transfer Utility. The footage takes up about 20 gigs/hour, which is a bit too much for my liking. Also, I've just found out that the Windows version of Adobe Premiere Pro won't accept this file format.
I don't want to store the footage as the raw BPAV files. I want to store the footage in some sort of format that can be played by anyone. That's why I'm not using the Browser utility, or importing the files directly into FCP/Premiere.
What format should I be using for archival? I don't want to lose quality, and I want it to be universally recognized and playable by as many computers as possible. What about using handbrake to encode it using lossless h264 as .m4v files?
Richard