![]() ![]() Final Cut Pro seems to do an OK job in deinterlacing when I briefly tested it. dv clips as master files in case someone wants to re-edit them. NTSC conversion calculations are even weirder. For example 4:3 PAL 720x576 either a) scaled to 788x576 and cropped to 768x576 or b) cropped to 702x576 and scaled to 768x576 (16:9 has its own figures). Rectangular DV pixels are also usually converted to square pixels. My ffmpeg project with "bob" deinterlacing was triggered by a test how well all interlaced fields could be preserved with smoother motion when usual deinterlacing throws 50% of video material away. dv with comb lines look awful on progressive computer monitors so it must be deinterlaced (although some footage with long shutter speed is effectively progressive and does need deinterlacing). iMovie understood the sampling rate and so there were no audio sync issues.) (BTW, the tapes were imported using iMovie as Digital8 camcorders apparently used an oddball audio sampling rate that Final Cut Pro couldn't handle importing the video using FCP resulted in audio that moved out-of-sync in random ways that's difficult/impossible to fix. mov container or not? If it's going to be lossy anyway then I might as well use a more modern format instead. Does anyone here understand video formats and containers well enough to tell me if using MPEG Streamclip in this fashion would losslessly package up the DV format video in a. I do have an older Mac that I could install MPEG Streamclip on, but it would be much slower than my current machine. Are there other programs out there that can do the conversion? Compressor and QuickTime (at least current versions of them) don't. mov files, but that's a 32-bit legacy program that won't run on recent Mac OS versions. (Someone please correct me if I'm wrong and this would still require reencoding with associated quality loss.)Īncient posts on the Apple Communities indicate that the MPEG Streamclip program was capable of converting. mov files I'm thinking converting to that format would retain the original quality (still in DV) but in a way that's still supported. Due to size constraints converting them all to uncompressed SD format using Compressor isn't really feasible. ![]() ![]() dv files are considered obsolete I need them in a different format, but I also want to maintain the original quality if at all possible. ![]() dv files imported from Digital8 tapes via an older version of iMovie. ![]()
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