I'm a recording engineer that's dabbling in video, so my knowledge is a bit one-sided. I have the audio side down, but how it relates to video is still a bit of a mystery to me so bear with me here. :)
I captured an 18 minute project from a Sony Hi-8 camera via my firewire card and the clip points seem to drift. The video was recorded with audio at 44 instead of 48, but I set the project up that way. The longer the clip, the more of a space there is between it and the next one. It recorded without a single dropped frame and the quality is fine. It seems like the audio was recording at the wrong sample rate and the video followed it. Everything plays back at the proper pitch, so it doesn't appear to be a sample rate playback issue. Could I have recorded at the wrong sample rate and have it play back properly? Would the video follow the audio and therefore leave these little "catch up" spaces at the end of each clip? I tried capturing at 44 and 48 with the same results.
Thanks
Neil Meckelborg
I captured an 18 minute project from a Sony Hi-8 camera via my firewire card and the clip points seem to drift. The video was recorded with audio at 44 instead of 48, but I set the project up that way. The longer the clip, the more of a space there is between it and the next one. It recorded without a single dropped frame and the quality is fine. It seems like the audio was recording at the wrong sample rate and the video followed it. Everything plays back at the proper pitch, so it doesn't appear to be a sample rate playback issue. Could I have recorded at the wrong sample rate and have it play back properly? Would the video follow the audio and therefore leave these little "catch up" spaces at the end of each clip? I tried capturing at 44 and 48 with the same results.
Thanks
Neil Meckelborg