To those of us who are accustomed to what happens when frames drop during capture with analog video, switching over to DV has an insidious little surprise for you: there's never a dropped frame during capture.
'Wow,' I said to myself...
Later on, at the final stage of a recent project, when I sent my work back out the IEEE-1394 port to the camcorder, I found little annoying 'snags' that were hard to figure out. On the one hand, it seemed like a frame might be missing. But on the other hand, there were no dropped frames during capture, and the 'analyze video' in MSP showed no missing frames on either the source clips or on the finished clip.
Curiouser and curiouser...
At this point, I began a three day system tweaking safari. I did anything and everything I ever did to make it smooth with my Rainbow Runner. Damn if my finished project didn't still have those little annoying 'snags' in a couple of spots.
Upon really REALLY close examination, looking at each individual frame in MSP on the timeline, I finally discovered what happens: instead of a frame missing or coming out with half the interlaced field missing ('evil frame'), I had a couple of spots where a frame WAS missing, but was replaced by the frame before it!
As it turned out, this happened during capture with the drive running with write-behind cache. This was a new WD 30.7gig drive, too!
So, I just thought I'd share that little tidbit for any of you who might be going the same route... the same system activities that used to bite into captures on analog systems can easily apply to DV, too.
'Wow,' I said to myself...
Later on, at the final stage of a recent project, when I sent my work back out the IEEE-1394 port to the camcorder, I found little annoying 'snags' that were hard to figure out. On the one hand, it seemed like a frame might be missing. But on the other hand, there were no dropped frames during capture, and the 'analyze video' in MSP showed no missing frames on either the source clips or on the finished clip.
Curiouser and curiouser...
At this point, I began a three day system tweaking safari. I did anything and everything I ever did to make it smooth with my Rainbow Runner. Damn if my finished project didn't still have those little annoying 'snags' in a couple of spots.
Upon really REALLY close examination, looking at each individual frame in MSP on the timeline, I finally discovered what happens: instead of a frame missing or coming out with half the interlaced field missing ('evil frame'), I had a couple of spots where a frame WAS missing, but was replaced by the frame before it!
As it turned out, this happened during capture with the drive running with write-behind cache. This was a new WD 30.7gig drive, too!
So, I just thought I'd share that little tidbit for any of you who might be going the same route... the same system activities that used to bite into captures on analog systems can easily apply to DV, too.
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