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Known Participant
August 22, 2012
Question

Premier Pro Slow Motion is jerky (not smooth) when exporting with Mercury Playback GPU Acceleration

  • August 22, 2012
  • 4 replies
  • 43878 views

When rendering slow motion video clips (video slowed down to, for example, 30%), with Mercury Playback GPU Acceleration and with frame blend enabled, the rendered video is not smooth (is jerky). Frame Blending does not have any effect on the rendered output , The results are identicle with and without Frame Blend.

When software only rendering, and with frame blend enabled (ticked), the resulting video is smooth motion.

Please take a look at the following which demonstrates the issue:

https://vimeo.com/48133743

I am using the following:

Windos 7  64 bit

Premier Pro CS5.5 (with latest updates)

NVIDIA GeForce GTX 570 (with latest driver)

The video I am rendering is HDV 1080i format..

I have tried exporting in MPEG2 and M2T with Max Render Quality ticked. Both formats produce the same results.

Why does Frame Blending have no effect on slowed down clips when exporting with Mercury Playback GPU Acceleration? Is this a known issue?

This topic has been closed for replies.

4 replies

Inspiring
May 31, 2022

Hi I am having the same issue as you. It started last week all of a sudden. Using Sony A7S3 10 bit, 60 frames a second slowed to half, I am having bad motion blur even with very slow movements on my part while taking video. I don't know what to do about it. I am trying to search for a solution. I dropped back to version 22 2.0 and I thought that fixed it, but no.

Participant
June 22, 2022

God. I'm running into this for months! It's unbelievable that they haven't fixed this since 2014.

Looking for solutions but nothing can help.

Participant
November 2, 2012

Thought I chime in here for some more information. I'm not a video pro (rarely do anything related) but from what I understand slowing down a clip and enabling Frame Blend should produce a smooth result. However, when I do exactly that with the current CS6 I get the same choppy result that has been the subject of this thread.

So as long as I am not overseeing something in the process of creating slow motion, the problem still exists with CS6.

To test it I used a h264 video @ 1080p60 I exported with Sony Vegas at 100% speed and normal settings (as far as I can tell) earlier. I imported it into a new project, slowed it down and enabled frame blend (for the clip as well as later in export). However, the frames in the resulting video are not interpolated but duplicated, so all I see is a slide show with 12 FPS.

Renderer is MPE, software only (apparently my 660 Ti is not even supported...).

Participating Frequently
November 3, 2012

First, I have a video showing the slow motion problem in CS5.5 and CS6.  CS5 seems to be okay.  Here it the link to the video    http://www.studio1productions.com/blog/?p=93

Also, you can enable you 660Ti to run in GPU mode.  Here is an article explain how and a software program I wrote that will do it for you for CS5, CS5.5 and CS6

http://www.studio1productions.com/Articles/PremiereCS5.htm

Dave

Known Participant
December 28, 2012

Hi

I raised this issue with Adobe back in August 2012 - see above. Adobe have withdrwan the support case I raised with the following comments:

"The case has been withdrawn as it is a known bug & has been reported to our Engineering Team for further research."

So, at least it has been acknowledged as a bug. Hopefully a fix on its way in the not too distant future.

Jeff Bellune
Legend
August 25, 2012

I don't know what combination of hardware or settings is affecting your result, but I just exported AVCHD 1080i source footage that was slowed down to 15% using hardware MPE in CS5.5 and the result was silky-smooth slow motion.  I exported to MPEG2 Blu-ray using Premiere Pro's built-in encoder.  I have a GTX560Ti card using the latest drivers.

Jeff

Legend
August 25, 2012

In my test with 24p media, both hardware and software looked like crap at 30%, very stuttery, even with Frame Blend.

Legend
August 26, 2012

Hi Simon, not sure why your getting problems with playback of video produced from both software and GPU. Might be worth checking your exporting to the same format as your original source video - for example, converting from progressive to interlaced (and vice sera) can sometimes cause the video to appear choppy.

It could also be due to the speed of you hard disc - if your running at 5400rpm, might be worth authoring your frame blended, software rendered - not GPU,  video onto DVD disc and playing through a DVD player. If it plays smoothly through your DVD player then it is likely to be your machine or disc that is causing playback problems.


I didn't try an export, just in the sequence.

30% looks horrendous.  Which doesn't surprise me.  There's just not enough data to slow it down that much and make it look good..  What surprises me is how you got it working in software mode and Jeff got it working at only 15%.  I don't understand that.

Known Participant
August 25, 2012

This is the first time I have used this forum. I am surprised no one has replied after several days of me posting this question. Perhaps I have not described the problem clearly. If anyone has any questions or requires clarification, please do not hesitate to ask.

I have since been liaising with Studio 1 Productions who have also confirmed this problem in CS5.5 - please visit the following link for more information:

http://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=455951077751730&id=149452058431969

We are conducting further experiments to see if this problem also exists in CS6.

Can anyone suggest how we can get this escalated to the right people?

Jeff Bellune
Legend
August 25, 2012

Can anyone suggest how we can get this escalated to the right people?

Adobe - Feature Request/Bug Report Form