NOTE: I did search the forum, and found some results that relate to this. However, there were quotes like: "If you are initially in synch, but maybe out an hour later, there are various tools in Vegas - Split, stretch (Ctrl drag edge), to keep things lined up. " (Source thread: http://www.sonymediasoftware.com/forums/ShowMessage.asp?ForumID=4&MessageID=304410)
Is this common? Should I expect to have to touch up the timing? Even small timing issues bother me greatly. I have commercial music DVDs (originally recorded on laser disc) that have timing sync issues - i.e. the violinist's bow is CLEARLY not with the audio. I don't consider that acceptable. But then, it would be VERRRY time consuming to try to fix those kinds of issues all through a full length concert recording.
Thoughts?
ORIGINAL POST:
Hey folks!
Question: How feasible is it to syncronize audio from a DAW (Vegas, Sonar 4 or my Yamaha HDD recorder) with video from a consumer camcorder like the Panasonic GS250? I know the software portion of putting the two in sync should be easy. I'm wondering about drift in the camcorder timing. This consumer cam doesn't have SMPTE ouput for alignment/sync purposes.
For example: I plan to record audio into my DAW system (I have the three options listed above) with my high end audio mics, and simultaneously record audio & video on the camcorder. I would like to be able to record a couple clicks, beeps, etc. at the beginning and then line up the DAW audio tracks with the camcorder audio tracks using those clicks, beeps, etc. later. Then I can delete the camcorder audio track. Do I risk having video and audio out of sync late in the recording or are the consumer MiniDV cams stable enough to avoid A/V drift?
I would like to do some music DVD work with this, but will do a lengthy recording test before I do any live or for-pay work. ...that is, unless somebody responds here and says "You'd be wasting your time trying to do that with this kind of equipment".
--
Mike
Is this common? Should I expect to have to touch up the timing? Even small timing issues bother me greatly. I have commercial music DVDs (originally recorded on laser disc) that have timing sync issues - i.e. the violinist's bow is CLEARLY not with the audio. I don't consider that acceptable. But then, it would be VERRRY time consuming to try to fix those kinds of issues all through a full length concert recording.
Thoughts?
ORIGINAL POST:
Hey folks!
Question: How feasible is it to syncronize audio from a DAW (Vegas, Sonar 4 or my Yamaha HDD recorder) with video from a consumer camcorder like the Panasonic GS250? I know the software portion of putting the two in sync should be easy. I'm wondering about drift in the camcorder timing. This consumer cam doesn't have SMPTE ouput for alignment/sync purposes.
For example: I plan to record audio into my DAW system (I have the three options listed above) with my high end audio mics, and simultaneously record audio & video on the camcorder. I would like to be able to record a couple clicks, beeps, etc. at the beginning and then line up the DAW audio tracks with the camcorder audio tracks using those clicks, beeps, etc. later. Then I can delete the camcorder audio track. Do I risk having video and audio out of sync late in the recording or are the consumer MiniDV cams stable enough to avoid A/V drift?
I would like to do some music DVD work with this, but will do a lengthy recording test before I do any live or for-pay work. ...that is, unless somebody responds here and says "You'd be wasting your time trying to do that with this kind of equipment".
--
Mike