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Ron Evans May 12th, 2013 07:55 AM

Re: Frame Rate General Discussion
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by James Hollingsworth (Post 1795145)
Nevertheless, any thoughts on how to get the 108050P into final cut in the first place?

No idea as I am PC based and Edius, Vegas and CS6 will all edit 60P native.

Ron Evans

Craig Marshall May 13th, 2013 03:57 AM

Re: Frame Rate General Discussion
 
Lightworks Pro 64bit will also edit native 50P/60P AVCHD but you will need a modern, fast PC with very fast Hard Drives or SSD media drives. (I prefer to work with 10 bit DNxHD transcoded files)

For more information, see Lightworks

Noa Put May 13th, 2013 04:33 AM

Re: Frame Rate General Discussion
 
Quote:

Lightworks Pro 64bit will also edit native 50P/60P AVCHD but you will need a modern, fast PC with very fast Hard Drives or SSD media drives.

Is that a lightworks requirement? Just asking because I still edit 1080p 50p on a previous I7 generation processor on 7200rpm single drives using edius with no issue, even when using 3 camera's in a multicamera sequence (all native formats)

Craig Marshall May 13th, 2013 06:04 AM

Re: Frame Rate General Discussion
 
No, not specifically a Lightworks issue. To edit any inter-frame acquisition format like AVCHD, you will need an optimised PC, especially the graphics board because of the Long GOP nature of the codec. Most laptops are unsuitable. Intra-frame codecs like DNxHD or ProRes are much less processor intensive so are a better proposition for really 'edit intensive' work. If you are just putting in the odd cut or dissolve, then you can edit native AVCHD.

Lightworks uses very refined, 'no frills' code so is a very fast editor - very intuitive. Out of all the PC based NLEs I have used: Avid, Vegas, etc Lightworks is the most satisfying. Perhaps it reminds me of cutting film the most. It is fast and fluent so one of the reasons it has been such a popular editor for cutting blockbuster Hollywood movies.

Noa Put May 13th, 2013 06:17 AM

Re: Frame Rate General Discussion
 
Quote:

To edit any inter-frame acquisition format like AVCHD, you will need an optimised PC,
I'd rather say you need a optimized NLE, I have a simple GPU card (gtx460) and besides a cut or dissolve I can also colorcorrect in realtime. I don't have any experience with laptops where I suppose you need a recent higher end one but for desktops you can get a more basic one without any specific hardware requirements if you edit with Edius.

Ron Evans May 13th, 2013 06:17 AM

Re: Frame Rate General Discussion
 
Like Noa I use Edius and I normally edit 4 tracks of AVCHD native multicam from a single 7200 rpm drive with no problems and I do not have a fast graphics card either as Edius does not use the GPU for editing only some of the plugins and filters use the GPU. My PC is a low cost i7 2600K CPU, 16G RAM running WIN7. I also have CS6 and Vegas so can also say that they will not edit native files as well as Edius, Vegas easier than CS6 on my system. You only need intermediate codecs if the system is incapable of editing realtime native and then I agree you will need fast drives because data rate has been used rather than processor power.

Ron Evans

Craig Marshall May 13th, 2013 06:46 AM

Re: Frame Rate General Discussion
 
I work with a low spec i3 laptop which is why I use timecoded DNxHD or timecoded MJPEG proxies then render from uncompressed intermediates to an uncompressed 10 bit AVI Master. One of the reasons I transcode my AVCHD to proxies and intermediates with AWPro is that it will generate and embed identical timecode into proxy and intermediate at the same time - also a great workflow for DaVinci Resolve.

I've not used Edius but it is highly regarded. Lightworks free is free and Lightworks Pro 64bit is only a $60 annual subscription - including all future upgrades.


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