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Participant
August 26, 2017
Answered

PAL to NTSC conversion and export options - can anyone help?

  • August 26, 2017
  • 2 replies
  • 9683 views

Hi all, I'm wondering if anyone can help me.

I'm just about to begin editing a 4 minute video that the client wants delivered to both the USA and UK. The client wants the USA version to be delivered in 29.97i, NTSC, full uncompressed HD. This will be screened to a large conference on a big screen. The UK wants 25p PAL, as I you'd expect. This will just be for online use.

All footage was shot in UHD 29.97 PAL.

My questions are:

(For the USA / screening version)

1. What is a good way to convert 29.97p / PAL to 29.97i / NTSC?

and

(For the UK version)

2. What is a good way to convert 29.97p / PAL to 25p PAL?

Is there anything I need to do to my footage before I begin editing, or is it a case of handling this conversion at the end of the process when I come to export different formats? In Compressor etc.

Any advice at all would be greatly appreciated.

Many thanks,

Peter

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Ann Bens

Might want to ask the client,

USA: why uncompressed and interlaced if its for a big screen?

UK: if its online you need progressive not interlaced and you can leave it at 29,97.

2 replies

John T Smith
Community Expert
Community Expert
August 26, 2017

Old, but this may help to Convert NTSC <--> PAL http://forums.adobe.com/thread/1209530

Participant
August 26, 2017

Thanks John!

Ann Bens
Community Expert
Community Expert
August 26, 2017

All footage was shot in UHD 29.97 PAL.

This is not quite correct. NTSC is 29,97 - PAL is 25 fps.

In which country do you live and what camera has been used.

It its all computer generated and not mixed with 25 fps in the UK I would leave it 29,97.

Converting 29,97 to 25 fps can be a big pita.

Participant
August 26, 2017

Thanks for replying Ann, much appreciated. Yes, I thought as much about converting from 29.97 to 25fps.

I live in the UK and will be editing in the UK. The camera used was a Sony FS7 and was shot at 29.97fps.

I've opened up the footage in Premiere and it seems to be saying the footage is progressive. Any advice on how to convert to interlaced?

Thanks

Ann Bens
Community Expert
Ann BensCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
August 26, 2017

Might want to ask the client,

USA: why uncompressed and interlaced if its for a big screen?

UK: if its online you need progressive not interlaced and you can leave it at 29,97.