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December 7, 2018
Answered

Audio Drift Help for noob

  • December 7, 2018
  • 3 replies
  • 5494 views

Apparently this is a common issue within Premier Pro, but all the discussions I'm reading about how to fix it may as well be Greek written in wingdings for my level of understanding.

I'm working with an MP4 HD screen recording with MPEG audio, and another MPEG file for a microphone recording.

At the beginning of the video, everything is synced perfectly ... but 5 mins in, even with no cuts nor editing, the audio of BOTH Mpegs are out of sync. (Even the one that recorded simultaneous with the video)
This program is very complicated to me, especially as I'm self-taught in all this... Even doing simple things like adding basic annotations has been a learning curve so please include screenshots or detailed explanations of what I can do/what further info is needed by you guys before an answer can be presented.

Highly appreciate anyone's time!

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer R Neil Haugen

I don't know what the other parameters of the vid are outside the framerate... Again I'm beginner/self taught. (Sorry for being needy... gotta start somewhere)

20% done encoding. Fingers crossed.


Handbrake will take care of this, and for settings ... in the Dimensions tab make sure that it uses original media frame-size and not a specific frame-size option, then back in the Video tab as shown above ... you need to set both a specific number in the Frame-rate box and check the CFR button-hole.

In order to keep quality up, I prefer:

-Encoder Level: 4.2 or higher;

-Constant Quality about halfway to the right-end from where it is in Ann's graphic, towards the Placebo end.

These give me a file about the same size as the original rather compressing it further.

Neil

3 replies

Legend
December 7, 2018

all the discussions I'm reading about how to fix it may as well be Greek written in wingdings

"It is the misunderstood word that establishes aptitude—or lack of it."

Third Barrier: Misunderstood Word | Study Technology | Applied Scholastics International

Participating Frequently
December 7, 2018

Think of a large marching band - every member has to be in step together and playing to the same beat. If you have one guy off doing his own thing...that's a problem. And so it goes with Variable Frame Rate video - there is no rhythm or beat, it's just all over the place!

So like Ann said, best to convert the VFR footage to Constant Frame Rate, then start editing with the new CFR clip. I don't see Premiere being the issue at all. VFR is just bastardized video unfortunately.

Thanks

Jeff

Ann Bens
Community Expert
Community Expert
December 7, 2018

I would run the file through Handbrake first and set it to constant framerate before bringing it into Pr.

HandBrake

R Neil Haugen
Legend
December 7, 2018

Most screen recordings are VFR ... variable frame rate ... for the video part, but audio is always constant. PrPro is not always great at keeping VFR perfectly in sync.

Go to your clips in a bin, right-click, Modify and set "assume this framerate" to the framerate the media was recorded at. Then create a new sequence using that media on the sequence.

Neil

Everyone's mileage always varies ...
December 7, 2018

Okay Neil I found which one is the clip bin, (and I'm assuming you wanted me to right click on the video, not audio?) and I found "Assume this Framerate" under
Modify>Interpret footage>Assume this Framerate [60]
I can only do this for the video recording though. I'll update on if that worked shortly.

Ann and Safeharbor, is this what you're referring to? Or something else?
https://handbrake.fr/