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Protokore
Participant
May 1, 2018
해결됨

Premiere imports 60fps footage to 14.99fps

I shot footage for school projects in 60fps and some in 30fps. The camera I use is a Nikon D5200

All footage of 1920x1080 60fps is imported as 14.99fps and interpreting the footage only speeds everything up and murders the audio.

But anything that was shot in 1920x1080p 30fps is fine, no issues at all. I will for future purposes record that way for now until I find a fix to this.

I don't understand the problem with the 60fps footage as I never had this issue before on older versions of Premiere.

이 주제는 답변이 닫혔습니다.
최고의 답변: Trent Happel

This issue should be addressed in the 12.1.2 update that was just released. The files should be back to the behavior seen in 12.0.1. Make sure to delete your Media Cache before opening the files with 12.1.2.

More information on fixed issues and new functionality:

https://helpx.adobe.com/premiere-pro/kb/fixed-issues.html

https://helpx.adobe.com/premiere-pro/using/whats-new.html

11 답변

R Neil Haugen
Legend
May 1, 2018

What is your computer gear, OS and all that?

Neil

Everyone's mileage always varies ...
Protokore
Protokore작성자
Participant
May 1, 2018

AMD Radeon R9 200 Series.

Participating Frequently
May 2, 2018

Can someone explain a) the framerate (60) and original framerate (30) and b) the "scan type, store method." Google was not really my friend. I assume this is, as Neil says, ordinary footage. But one comment (with different media info specs) was that a container (QT) and codec could have conflicting info in a file. Since the older PR reads it correctly, it would point to some difference in the newer PR method of interpreting such header info?


Hi Stan,
Sorry first for my poor english, it's not my native language. I will try to explain some points.
Framerate / original framerate means that the footage is recorded in "interlaced" mode. It means also theres 2 pictures recorded for 1 displayed. If you check the MediaInfo reports you can see there's too kinds of files. The first recorded in "Progressive" 30fps : ok! And the second one in 60fps "interlaced"... Then 30fps for real.

"Scan Type" is the mode that I'm talking about (progressive or interlaced)

If you shoot a video in 60fps interlaced, premiere should interpreting the footage in 30fps.
I think there's first a conflict between the progressives and interlaced files, cause you need to choose 1080p or 1080i sequence to edit your videos.

That's why I advise to convert / conform footages with third-party software before editing in premiere.

Last point, I had issues since the 12.1 premiere update with my Nikon video files. Premiere do not recognize H264 MOV from my camera. This is the reason while I recommend to convert in ProRes.