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MegMacDonald
March 12th, 2002, 04:16 PM
HELP In the middle of an edit, and suddenly one critical interview won't capture. Closer look----for the first time I've had the system (GL-1 and DV 500) frames are dropping out of the video. Like 9 or 10% are showed to be dropped. Looked everyhere for info in Premiere materials...please, anyone have ideas? New, blacked tapes...two shoots, on two different days. No mosaic-ing or striping....actually audio seems fine, video ok, just won't capture.


Thanks so much----Meg MacDonald at MAWM@AOL.com

Ken Tanaka
March 12th, 2002, 04:46 PM
Hello Meg,
We recently had someone else with a sudden dropped frames problem (I think with Premiere). I think it was Joe Redifer who speculated that the problem might be due to a fragmented capture drive. Voila! It sure was. All other factors being equal, perhaps a defrag might work for you, too. It couldn't hoit.

Good luck.

Alexander Ibrahim
March 12th, 2002, 06:05 PM
It has been a while since you posted this, but I was looking through the old posts...

What do I recommend as a DP for a new shooter in teh US ?

Well, unless you are well funded or know how you are making an income from your movies I do NOT recommend PAL. You can get good results from NTSC cameras, plus you can use your camera for simpler event work, and ytou do not haev to struggle with acquiring additional PAL equipment, like a monitor.

Also, you'll have to deal with another problem...PAL equipment is meant for european 220 cycle mains power, you will need to keep European travele kits around. A minor annoyance...but if you break the kit you can't go to Radio Shack, you have to order from a country that uses 220 cycle power mains.

The alternative is to run EVERYTHING off battries...so you'll need heavier duty batteries and chargers. Anton Bauer is who I'd recommend. You may want to consider their Titan batteries since you can charge the batteries and run the camera or monitor or whatever simultaneously. Of course you can run the chargers etc from 120 cycle power.

Even once you get that PAL equipment you have to remember your primary market starting out will be...you geussed it, the good ol US of A TV market...which is in NTSC! So you have to deal with format conversions etc. If you KNOW your primary market will include film distribution, it may be worth it, but I don't think so.

In considering all the goodies you want to add on to the camera THe XL-1S is still a great value. If you buy the JVC DV500 (my ONLY other recommendation) you will spend more cash, but only a little more...so look at that.

The DV500 comes with a manual lens, a solid B&W viewfinder for about $4300 USD. After you get batteries (I recommend Anton Bauer, which means you need an adaptor) you should be at about $5500. It also includes XLR inputs.

For about the same money you can get a well rigged XL-1S. Add the rotating matte holder, rods and sunshade, plus a tripod and XLR...oh and the manual lens...and you should just scrape in under $5800. The JVC similiarly configured should run ~$7200. (Assuming you use an adaptor and "consumer" tripod. If you use the tripods and heads the camera was "meant" for (Vinten Sachtler et al.) you'll be at about ~$8300 USD.) It *is* worht the extra money, but do you have it around ?

Don't worry too much about the viewfinder. You NEED a good monitor on the set all the time for DP work, otherwise you WILL get unwanted reflections and image problems that are difficult if not impossible to fix in post.

Sorry again if this was too late, but I hope it helps somebody out there.

Rob Lohman
March 13th, 2002, 05:23 AM
The biggest problem is frame rate. Not resolution. See the thread
"How to minimize flicker in PAL image" under General Topcis
for some more thoughts on this!

Mike Cassidy
March 14th, 2002, 04:42 AM
Hi, I have just bought a Canon XL1S, i'm using 12 bit ST1-2. I can mix ok using analog cables attached to the Casablanca, but when connected via the firewire, i only get stereo 1 sound, no mix, or Stereo 2 sound. I've tried using a Panasonic E20 DVD recorder and the problem's the same, using firewire.
Does anyone else have this problem?
Please help, Mike.

Rob Lohman
March 14th, 2002, 05:18 AM
This is by design (if I understand your problem). The firewire
gives you back the original 2 stereo tracks (4 channels). It
will allow you to mix them manually in the editing suite. This
is better anyway! You do not want them pre-mixed.

Bill Ravens
March 14th, 2002, 10:47 AM
A while ago, someone was asking how to add timecode stamp to a DV. I have located a filter plugin for those of you familiar with VirtualDub that will add a timecode stamp and frame no. to each frame. The URL for this pluginis here:

http://toonarchive.com/addframenumbers/

mdreyes23
March 14th, 2002, 12:11 PM
Newbie Question...

I'm pretty happy with the 16x9 footage that can be shot with the GL-1 even though it's not a true anamorphic image. But all that aside. The procedure I use if I want to input DV 16x9 footage into premiere, edit, and then output 16x9 - basically I create a DV NTSC widescreen format project, input footage, edit, and export to camcorder in NTSC widescreen format. Image on DV tape is stretched...which then plays unstretched on my 16x9 TV. I think this works...although seems like I'm getting part of the image cut off on both sides when I last tried, but not sure...have to check on that again later.

Okay, here is the actual question...

I want to be able to send copies of my completed footage to other people...but I don't want it in that widescreen stretch since they don't have widescreen TVs. I want it to be in standard NTSC format with black bars on top and bottom so the image doesn't look distorted. I poked around and I think the way to do this is with the Transform Effect in Adobe Premiere. Does that sound right to you guys? Basically I create a DV Standard NTSC format, input my finished video (which is a stretched image), then use the transform effect to squash the image and produce top and bottom black bars. Then output in DV standard ntsc format to DV tape.

By the way, why does Duke always get special treatment. I hate that. They've got like the easiet bracket this year. Go Maryland!

Rob Lohman
March 15th, 2002, 02:24 AM
Thanks! that might come in handy!

Rob Lohman
March 15th, 2002, 02:30 AM
Search on this subject on this board. There was a thread
that fully described how this is going to work. Basically you
open the footage in a 4:3 (NON WIDESCREEN) mode of your
editor. You let the editor resample at the correct aspect
ratio. While saving you save as the original resolution and
add black bars.

Like I said, find that other thread. It has all the things you
must do by name in Premiere.

Good luck!

Adrian Douglas
March 17th, 2002, 08:41 AM
There seems to be a few crew popping up here from the Tokyo area. If anyone is interested in getting togeather once a month to drink some beer, shoot the breeze and maybe even talk about DV stuff, drop me an e-mail and we can try to organise something.

Tokyo Mac World is coming up in at the end of this month, maybe it could be a good place to start out.

fargograf
March 17th, 2002, 11:01 AM
Does anyone know of links to sites that address legal issues for filmmakers? I've done searches...but the results are quite a mis-mash.

tnks :>/

Ken Tanaka
March 17th, 2002, 11:23 PM
Video University might have some helpful information. They have standard agreements and other reference materials on their site.
http://www.videouniversity.com/

Of course no site will offer detailed advice. For that you will need an attorney.

John Locke
March 17th, 2002, 11:57 PM
Hi Adrian,

Count me in. I'll be there around late May. First round's on me.

fargograf
March 22nd, 2002, 07:46 AM
For broadcast projects, has anyone found the need to do dynamic compression on the audio? I'll be working with live music we've recorded...and sometimes the softer bits are lost.

If so, is there software that does the job when doing digital editing? Or is this something that's done as a final audio-post?

Thanks in advance.

Nori Wentworth
March 25th, 2002, 12:07 PM
I compress when I am capturing the footage.