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Hello. My clip from Hero3 Black Gopro isn't recognized as a 120fps clip. I've read people saying that this is normal because premiere pro won't recognize them for anyone.. But it does, look at this clip:
At around second 30 it shows how it recognizes that the file is actually 120fps, in that same screen, I get that the file is 59,94fps and not 120fps and it really is.
What am I doing wrong?
Thank you.
If anybody is still interested in this.
What solved the problem for me, is download the gopro studio 2.0 edit software (http://gopro.com/software-app/gopro-studio)
then import your file there export it with the option for further editing or archiving, import that file into premiere, or after effects
and it will recognize it with 120fps!
not a video codec expert, new file is CineForm avi, don't know if there's any loss in quality
peace
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Drag the clip into the New item Icon to create a new sequence that matches the footage.
It will treat the clip as 120 fps.
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It still displays as 59,94fps footage... I'm going to download a 120fps file and see if the problem is in the file that GoPro didn't really record at 120fps even though it's correctly set up.
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I don't know about CS6, but there have been other messages about the difficulty of editing GoPro
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OK I've tested some and this is what I've found.
When I import a wvga 240fps clip, premiere recognises it as a 240fps clip:
But when I import a 720p 120fps wide or narrow clip it won't recognise it as a 120fps clip, instead it thinks it's a 59,94fps clip:
Both under same settings.
Still no clue of what's going on... anyone with this camera can test this out?
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More information. When I right click over the file it shows as 119 frames per second. So the problem is that premiere somehow doesn't recognise the format when in 720p. It's different with WVGA though.
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Hi
I am seeing this issue too. HD Hero3 black edition and Premiere Pro CS6 on Windows 7. I have tested several resolutions and frame rates and 720p 120fps is the only one it does not recognize. At first I thought it didn't like anything above 60 fps because I couldn't create a custom sequence above that. However when I use the other high framerate clips I tested such as the 848x480 240fps clip and the 1280x960 100fps clip, they display fine and when you create a sequence from them it carries over the correct framerate to the sequence settings.
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Is the framerate on the camera set as "variable?"
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No it is not. The camera does not have a variable setting, it is locked into settings based on the resolution. I can provide sample files if that is helpful.
There is a chart of supported resolutions and framerates here: http://gopro.com/cameras/hd-hero3-black-edition#specs
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I've created a few sample files for anyone interested. These files are straight from the camera.
Here is a 1280 x 720 at 60 fps: https://dl.dropbox.com/u/92935787/1280x720%2059fps.MP4
Here is a 1280 x 720 at 120 fps: https://dl.dropbox.com/u/92935787/1280x720%20119fps.MP4
Here is a 1280 x 960 at 100 fps: https://dl.dropbox.com/u/92935787/1280x960%20100fps.MP4
Import these into Premiere Pro CS6 or even Media Encoder CS6 or After Effects, have a look at the metadata and both of the 720p videos will show up as 60 (59.94) fps. I tried this in Premiere Pro CS5 and had the same result.
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I'm not sure why it is showing it wrong. But there is any easy fix.
If you put both your actual 59.94 and your 119 into a 59.94 sequence, then you mark how long a second takes to tick down on the clock, in the 59.94 it is 1 second. In the 119 it is about 2 seconds for an actual second in real time to pass. So it is seeing all the frames, just getting the frame rate wrong and therefore playing the 119 clips in slow motion.
Easy fix, is you right click on a selection of the wrong clips, go to modify-interpret footage- and tell it to assume the frame rate of 119 or 120 or whatever it should be. Then the clips will play down at normal speed.
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Thanks, that worked! It is good to know it sees all the frames.
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guys this is all good but when i reintepret the 119.88 footage that pp cant recognise from Gopro3 which is now back to normal on the speed side of things but not the audio portion, sounds like a chipmunk?
not sure what to do if u want to keep the audio, is 120fps usuable in cs5.5?
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i have the same problem.. and nobody could answer me about the audio playing too fast when changing the framerate..
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For what you need, click on a clip or a group of clips in the project
panel. Instead of using interpret footage and changing the frame rate.
Right click and go to where it says speed. Then change the speed
appropriately. So for 120fps going into a 23.976 timeline it would be
set to 20%, then click maintain audio pitch. Then they will come into
your timelines already set to 20% which would be the same as
interpreting to 23.976.
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for me the sound is still too fast and sounds like a chipmunk.
i have uploaded a clip, if someone wants to test..
http://depositfiles.com/files/keeticx5d
Edit: This it was it looks like in Magix..so easy it could be.
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I have this same issue, the weird thing for me is though that when i shoot in 720 @120fps whilst in one button mode Premiere recognises the file as 119.00 fps. I have tried different SD cards its quite annoying.
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If anybody is still interested in this.
What solved the problem for me, is download the gopro studio 2.0 edit software (http://gopro.com/software-app/gopro-studio)
then import your file there export it with the option for further editing or archiving, import that file into premiere, or after effects
and it will recognize it with 120fps!
not a video codec expert, new file is CineForm avi, don't know if there's any loss in quality
peace
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Yeah this will work. The format gopro uses in their software is high quality (and won't be as CPU-intensive for decoding as the mp4's the camera gives you), but you're always going to get a generational loss of quality when you convert a file. It's not huge and doing it once won't affect the overall quality of your video in a very noticable way but you should know it is there.
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For PrPr v.5, when importing 720p 120fps from the Hero3 Black, here's what I've found: The problem is isolated to the wide FOV camera settings.
At 720p, two Field of View (FOV) choices are available: Narrow or Wide
1) For 720p 120fps narrow, PrPr had no problems recognizes the file as 119 fps
2) For 720p 120fps wide, PrPr misinterpreted the footage as 59.94 fps
I wanted to slow down the footage so that it wouldn't appear jerky. Two methods for fixing this issue are mentioned above. One was to use the speed settings on the time line. This resulted in jerky motion. The better solution for me was to reinterpret footage as 119 fps (right clikd the file | Modify . . . | interpret footage... | select the radio button "Assume this frame rate: | in the empty field, type 119 | click the OK button).
By doing this, I was able to successfully reset the speed on the timeline to 10%; and, the resulting motion, an object tossed into frame, was smooth.