The track jumping issue with "sync by audio".
I am editing a roller derby bout, start to finish. The footage (all HD) consists of a continous overhead feed from a go-pro, which I put on track 1. Track 2 is HD video from a Samsung G5, and track 3 is from a canon video camera. The video on tracks 2 and 3 are trackside clips which start and stop between jams (think downs in football). The finished video is around 30 minutes, and tracks 2 and three will each contain around 25 clips each. Each of those clips need to be synced before editing, and "sync by audio" is a great time saving tool for that.
Attachment #1 is what the project will/should look like, (with additional clips) when multiple tracks are synced, before any of the clips are edited. In this instance, I have moved them manually individually up to their home track after using "sync by audio". In order for "sync by audio" to be totally efficient, it should do that automatically.
Step one is to put the first three clips on their respective tracks, select all, then sync by audio. So far, works perfectly, as shown in Attachment #2
The issue comes with step two, where I place the second clip on track 2 in it's approximate position and then select it and the track 1 clip, and then hit "sync by audio". Instead of merely moving the track 2 clip down the track to its' synced position, it moves the go-pro footage from track 1 down to track 4, and puts the clip from track 2 down to track 5, leaving track 1 empty, as shown in Attachment #3.
In what world would that be the desired result? While they are still synced, I now I to manually move the clip on track 4 back up to its former home on the now empty track 1, and move that clip on track 5 back up to track 2, all while making sure to keep them in exact position time-wise. Multiply that by 50-ish for the entire project, and you can see my issue.
My question is, is that a glitch, or is that how it is designed and how it works for everyone? Is there a setting or step that I am missing? I have tried a few different ways, but they always jump track. Having 100 clips on 100 different tracks would make further editing a nightmare.
If anyone is interested in seeing what CyberLink is capable of, a finished video is on you tube here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9gHijqtiNQ8 Three video sources, different formats and bit rates, all HD, and when burned to a standard dvd, (no menu) using AVCHD, are as sharp as any blu-ray.
PD13 64bit Ultimate 13.0.2604.0
SR: VDE150123-01
Windows 7
Filename | Att#2.JPG |
|
Description | three tracks after sync by audio |
|
Filesize |
178 Kbytes
|
|
Downloaded: | 90 time(s) |
Filename | Attachment #1.jpg |
|
Description | what it should do |
|
Filesize |
474 Kbytes
|
|
Downloaded: | 94 time(s) |
Filename | Att#3.JPG |
|
Description | after second track on track 2, sync by audio |
|
Filesize |
180 Kbytes
|
|
Downloaded: | 95 time(s) |