Excuse the not very informative title but I cannot think of a word to describe what I just saw.
I was trying to build a test case regarding Serena's thread regarding a 16mm film transfer and hit a major snag, Here's what I did and what I saw.
Bog standard NTSC DV 50i project, T/L ruler NTSC NDF.
Added black gen media and trimmed to 24 frame. Added one frame of gen media white. Copied and pasted this until I had a couple of minutes of this sequence.
At around 1:26:00 things get VERY funky. My one frame of white becomes a frame of horizontal lines. This effect seems to drift as I move down the T/L, the frame that should be white is OK, the next frame is this messed up frame of lines of black and white. Further along the T/L the white frame is wrong and the next frame is correct.
I have repeated the same test in V8.0 and cannot fault V8.
This would seem to indicate that V9 has an error with which frame is which, it appears to be interpolating the fields when it doesn't need to or some such. If anyone can repeat this to confirm my results much appreciated.
Bob.
I was trying to build a test case regarding Serena's thread regarding a 16mm film transfer and hit a major snag, Here's what I did and what I saw.
Bog standard NTSC DV 50i project, T/L ruler NTSC NDF.
Added black gen media and trimmed to 24 frame. Added one frame of gen media white. Copied and pasted this until I had a couple of minutes of this sequence.
At around 1:26:00 things get VERY funky. My one frame of white becomes a frame of horizontal lines. This effect seems to drift as I move down the T/L, the frame that should be white is OK, the next frame is this messed up frame of lines of black and white. Further along the T/L the white frame is wrong and the next frame is correct.
I have repeated the same test in V8.0 and cannot fault V8.
This would seem to indicate that V9 has an error with which frame is which, it appears to be interpolating the fields when it doesn't need to or some such. If anyone can repeat this to confirm my results much appreciated.
Bob.