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Hi david445,
I've had a quick look at the clips info. I'm more concerned with the fixed rated one than anything else. It has a compressed frame size of 1440x1080 and I have seen in the past this type cause problems when mixed with other frame sizes. I suggest you convert the fixed frame size to the same as the others and then edit them all. If you're in doubt about the variable rated one - run that through and convert it to the same as the others/mts format.
Just an opinion.
Dafydd
Thanks Dafydd, there are any tool you suggest to convert variable --> fixed frame rate?
I can't find any specific function in PD12 searching trough manual, tutorial or forum.
If I may pop in to just address this one part:
David is correct, there isn't a need to convert the video if it is VFR, as PD can handle it
I've imported VFR clips into PD12 a couple of times without problem.
If you just want to transcode something to a fixed frame rate no matter what (or you need it for uploading somewhere still), I was actually working on a post about that at my blog - for people that were running into problems with NVIDIA's Shadowplay and their game recordings not being importable into Premiere [sorry to name a competitor, but it is in a negative light
] So you don't have to go to the blog, here is the info on how to do it, below:
Problem: some applications can't import VFR (Variable Frame Rate), such as Adobe's Premiere (Lightworks and Vegas can also have problems with it still) - CyberLink's PowerDirector 12 does not have this problem
Workaround: transcode the video clips into CFR (Constant Frame Rate). This is possible using a few different programs (all of them completely free to use), a couple of them are:
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Handbrake (import and simply choose CFR)
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Windows Movie Maker, if you use Windows (import and simply export as MPEG-4/MP4, it will output CFR material)
For both, choose a very high bitrate, so that you do not lose much detail (much higher than the original).
As far as I know, there is no option to Force CFR output in PD12, but I could be wrong; I am an experienced video editor, but new to PowerDirector
Result: you can then import these CFR MPEG-4 (MP4) clips into almost all video editing applications that had the problem previously - and upload to any video sharing sites that required CFR material
I hope that helps you out a bit with that - enjoy!
Edit:
If mentioning these other applications is eyebrow-raising for this forum, please let me know - or edit this post, heh
This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at Sep 09. 2014 13:11