Steven Bills
January 10th, 2017, 10:09 PM
Hi all. I posted this over at DVXuser but it's not really getting a lot of traction over there, so I thought I'd try here. Not really sure this is the right section to post this in, but here it goes.
So I'm trying to free up space on my HDDs, ("space is cheap, just buy another one, blah, blah, blah"), and I had this wild hair to transcode my old ProRes files (they're mostly 4K 4:2:2 10 bit clips from a GH4 recording to a Ninja Flame) to h.265, simply because I don't think I'll ever use this footage ever again. So I did a test over the weekend where I transcoded the ProRes files from an entire project into HEVC, made a copy of the original project file, and then relinked the ProRes files to the new h.265 files. I did a test render and then compared the ProRes to the h.265, and they're visually the same. The original file sizes from the ProRes project was ~160GB, and the h.265 is less than 10GB. Space saved.
SO.
Is this a good idea to pursue? I am really only doing this to projects that have been wrapped up for a while and that I don't think I'll touch ever again. I just don't know about the archival qualities of the HEVC codec, as it's still pretty new.
Anyone have any thoughts on this?
SB
So I'm trying to free up space on my HDDs, ("space is cheap, just buy another one, blah, blah, blah"), and I had this wild hair to transcode my old ProRes files (they're mostly 4K 4:2:2 10 bit clips from a GH4 recording to a Ninja Flame) to h.265, simply because I don't think I'll ever use this footage ever again. So I did a test over the weekend where I transcoded the ProRes files from an entire project into HEVC, made a copy of the original project file, and then relinked the ProRes files to the new h.265 files. I did a test render and then compared the ProRes to the h.265, and they're visually the same. The original file sizes from the ProRes project was ~160GB, and the h.265 is less than 10GB. Space saved.
SO.
Is this a good idea to pursue? I am really only doing this to projects that have been wrapped up for a while and that I don't think I'll touch ever again. I just don't know about the archival qualities of the HEVC codec, as it's still pretty new.
Anyone have any thoughts on this?
SB