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Not a fanediting project, but hopefully something that peeps can help me with. I have not yet had to work with different framerates in fanediting, but I currently have a non-fanedit project I need to work on and have been given multiple pieces of footage (mp4) from different gopros that were unfortunately filmed at different framerates - not ideal, but it is what it is. These are the different framerates:
23.976 (the bulk)
29.970
50
80
Basically, I need to drop all these files into vegas and do some multi-cam style editing switching between the different cameras. What I don't want to happen (and would expect to happen) is to let Vegas handle the different framerates and potentially render out with flashframes or glitches because it's interpereting the footage differently on the timeline to when rendering. I've had a former project that i wasn't too concerned about frame blending etc. and just needed to get done ASAP, and that was exactly the issue I had. Naturally, I'd like to prevent that from happening and generally learn to work with multiple framerates properly, should it become relevant again.
My first thought was to index the file and use virtual dub, but if that is the way I'm not sure I went about it quite right because I kept getting errors. I'm also assuming there's potential for the higher framerates to basically become slow motion once converted... I wouldn't be sure how to avoid this either.
Any thoughts? Tips?
23.976 (the bulk)
29.970
50
80
Basically, I need to drop all these files into vegas and do some multi-cam style editing switching between the different cameras. What I don't want to happen (and would expect to happen) is to let Vegas handle the different framerates and potentially render out with flashframes or glitches because it's interpereting the footage differently on the timeline to when rendering. I've had a former project that i wasn't too concerned about frame blending etc. and just needed to get done ASAP, and that was exactly the issue I had. Naturally, I'd like to prevent that from happening and generally learn to work with multiple framerates properly, should it become relevant again.
My first thought was to index the file and use virtual dub, but if that is the way I'm not sure I went about it quite right because I kept getting errors. I'm also assuming there's potential for the higher framerates to basically become slow motion once converted... I wouldn't be sure how to avoid this either.
Any thoughts? Tips?