Steve House |
December 20th, 2005 05:24 AM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by A. J. deLange
Steve,
I'm with you on everything you say except that there is no relationship between samples and time code and between audio and video samples. One of the things that got talked about a lot in the past was that most of the prosumer cameras did not tie audio and video sampling together which potentially led to problems. In the XLH1 that has been fixed - audio sampling is locked to video (in the SD mode you have a choice of locked or unlocked though I have no idea what the implications of unlocked might be...
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Understood - but are we talking about locked verus unlocked audio here? Does the frame rate setting of the timecode sent from an external clock or the camera to the audio recorder change the way the recorder's sample rate syncs to the word clock it derives from the incoming TC signal?
I don't want to put words in Roy's mouth but I got the impression he thought that setting the timecode to be recorded to audio or video to drop or non-drop, 30 or 29.97 or 24 or 23.976 fps would somehow affect the recording process itself and that when using double system sound, having the camera recording code at 23.976 fps but the audio recording it at 29.97 fps would make difficult or impossible to achieve or maintain sync. It's going to an inconvenience to find matching frames when the numbers on the video frame are showing, say, 01:23:45;12 while the numbers recorded with the audio matching that frame are 01:23:45;15 but hardly something to lose sleep over <grin>.
Roy gives the impression he thinks that when you drop a video clip with timecode into an NLE and then drop an audio file in alongside it that has the same timecode, they can automatically sync up, shifting and stretching or contracting the audio file so the the timecode numbers for each frame recorded by the audio recorder will align themselves to matching frame number recorded in the video - am I correct in reading your questions that way Roy? I'm not aware of any NLE's that do that but I admit I'm not familiar with Avid, FCP or amy number of others.
As an aside, the combo of a Canon XLH1 camera and a Sound Devices 744T recorder looks like it would be a dyn-o-mite package for shooting double system. And I imagine if you can derive TC from the LANC connector on an XL2 the two would be a good match as well. The 744's timecode module is by the Ambient folks, basically a Lockit box mounted in the recorder, and they claim an accuracy of <0.2ppm. It can serve as either a master or a slave. When syncing to external code but with the camera and recorder set to different frame rates the Ambient and SD folks say in their manual that the recorded code jams at each full second.
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