View Full Version : Capturing HDV


Elmer Lang
December 30th, 2006, 01:01 PM
I'm thinking about getting the HV10. I had thought capturing HD would use nearly the same as space as SD. Is that right? Or if different for native, non-native, compressed, uncompressed, I'd love to know the different amounts.

thanks,
elmer

Ron Chau
December 30th, 2006, 03:53 PM
Yes, capturing to a PC, HD is the same filesize as SD. At least it is with Vegas 7 capturing to raw m2t files.

Steven Gotz
December 30th, 2006, 04:31 PM
If you use Premiere Pro or Vegas, and you use the Cineform codec, then where DV takes just under 13GB for an hour of video, Cineform takes 40GB at the Medium setting.

Eric Dyer
December 30th, 2006, 04:54 PM
Native HDV 1080i 60 is about 12gb per hour. Apple Intermediate Codec (1080i, 60) is about 42gb per hour.

Elmer Lang
December 31st, 2006, 10:38 AM
If so large, why do people capture using Cineform or Apple Intermediate? They're termed non-native, right?

But isin't editing native fairly simple? If there are explanations/tutorials somewhere let me know, please.

And if one captures HD as SD to edit, when recapturing you have to re-edit the footage, right, at lease time code-wise, and in different sequences, you can't just link HD footage into the SD timeline.

Any opinion as to which is the simplest way to go?

thanks,
elmer

Brian Luce
December 31st, 2006, 10:48 AM
If so large, why do people capture using Cineform or Apple Intermediate? They're termed non-native, right?

But isin't editing native fairly simple? If there are explanations/tutorials somewhere let me know, please.



thanks,
elmer

HDV uses a GOP natively. Group of Frames. It's a method of sampling that doesn't capture full frames--so each frame often may not have the full amount of data on it. NLE's don't like that--it bogs them down and things like colorc correcting don't work very well.

So the intermediates convert the sampled GOP frames into full frames which makes editing a snap.

I use vegas 6 on a single 3ghz P4 and it work perfectly with cineform.

Steven Gotz
December 31st, 2006, 11:12 AM
It is very difficult for a PC to figure out each frame when it has to go back a few and forward a few just to figure out that one frame. SO as stated above, converting to an intermediate codec, like Cineform, helps the PC do the job in real time. I seldom render until after I start color correcting. No need. And sometimes not even then.