Hi George
Frame rates not to be confused with shutter speeds.
The frame rate is the number of separate frames in each second of video taken by your camera, whereas the shutter speed is the amount of time the shutter is open to expose each frame. For instance a shutter speed of 50 will expose each frame your camera takes for 1/50th of a second. Ideally, the shutter speed is around double the frame rate.
I don't know where you are located, but generally if, like me, you are in PAL TV region your ideal frame rate would be 25 or 50, however, if you are living in an NTSC region your best frame rate would be 30 or 60 fps. These differences are caused because of the different frequencies used in the two regions ie PAL 50Hz and NTSC 60Hz.
So far as PD is concerned,
optodata has told you that by zooming right in to the timeline it is possible to edit down to an individual frame, but you should be aware, for clarity sake, of the following: If you zoom in on the timeline and watch the frame rate column on the counter while you move it along, you will see that it will return to zero after 25 or 50 or maybe 30 or 60. In other words whatever frame rate your camera used will be shown in that column. For example if you used a frame rate of 25, the column will return to zero after showing 25. (this assumes you have the framerate in PD set to the same as your camera fps)
Basically, if your are editing down to a single frame at say, 60fps you are editing 1/60th of a second of your video.
To answer your specific question: If you have a clip ending at 00:00:41:01 and a second one in another track beginning at 00:41:00:00 you would have a 1 frame overlap.
I hope this helps you
This message was edited 4 times. Last update was at Sep 10. 2015 16:38
Panny TM10, GH2, GH4,