Youtube can lag sometimes too. I was showing it to a co worker yesterday and it looked like stop motion on her computer (skipping over many frames and jerking), but then another guy's pc streamed it more smoothly. Also, I edited it through Microsoft Movie Maker, which downgraded it a bit. I have not been able to find a free/lowcost video editor that can hold a match to iMovie's (that comes free on my iPhone) functionality. Thanks for watchingWell filmed but is it me or is it 'stuttery' i.e does not flow smooothly. Have you removed ALL of the packing bits? Not criticism hones, more concern.![]()
Well, I didn't think the raw footage was jumpy or twitchy. Your eyes and experience may be more discerning than mine, though. I took off all the shrink rap, the stickers on the sensors, plastic on the props (not sure why they were necessary lol), and the foam gimble holder.Try the Cyberlink website. You may like it, or hate it.
Will try playback on Youtube at a lower resolution. Glad its not your P4P
Hi KevMo,Great location and flying man! Your stuttering is totally the software your using imo. Some of your clips are smoother than others but your getting some stutter in rendering I believe. Also what shutter speed and combined frame rate were you shooting at? This may some of your issue too.
I just had to google h.265 LOL. Still a little lost. Are you saying that Premier Pro CC cannot handle h.265?It cant do 4k@60fps with h.265 codec, just 30fps. If you want 60 fps with 4k you need to switch to h.264. However, 1080@120 is a beast too, try it
First off, Premier Pro CC is prob the best software going most likely! It is expensive each month but if you can justify it do it. I have been using it for 4 months now. It is a steep learning curve at first just getting your workflow set up. But Youtube is your biggest friend on this. So many good startup tutorials on Premier Pro for sure. And your tech talk on shutter speeds is pretty much correct when referring to still pics. But video is another ball of wax man. If I were you I would start shooting in 4K @ 30fps in h264 container format. Then try to get your shutter speed to double your frame rate. Which is 1/60 of a second if your at 30fps. This formula gives you a cinematic looking blur to your video that looks smooth. You'll will need some ND filters to get this exposure if you want to set your aperture around F5.6 which is the sweetest area for your aperture on this camera too. Now, If you have a fast computer and video card and plenty of video card ram it will play these files nicely on your computer straight out of camera. Now, Premier Pro still stutters a little bit with the 4K footage even if you have a super computer. So some people convert these video files to a diff format such as prores format ect. I'm not too familiar with this yet, but it's basically converting to a more compressed format so that your computer will play it smoother in Premier Pro while your trying to edit your footage before rendering final video piece. If you want free or cheaper software you might look at Davinci Resolve possibly. I've heard it's really good and they have a free version too. Video is a very complex cookie as I have found out and I'm sure others flying these 4K cameras have as well. YOUTUBE is your friend trust me.Hi KevMo,
I am not really sure what my shutter speed was. I have never been a "camera" guy, but I have a feeling I will be learning a lot, now. That said, all the camera settings are a bit overwhelming. Slow shutter speed can blur stuff like flowing water, right? Fast shutter speed captures precise moments in time? I do believe I was shooting in 4K/60 (I think it defaults to 4K/30 out of the box) however I do know that I was using Litchi for half and DJI Go for the other half (i'm not sure if default settings for one or the other would have changed my frame rate if I didn't make the adjustment). Also, Microsoft Movie Maker will only output 1080. I should start taking my SD card out, plugging into my 4k TV, and preview the original footage before editing so I can see how much gets lost in translation.
Question: What do you think of Premier Pro CC? What do you use?
I tried to record at 1080/120fps and it turns out my computer and smart TV cannot handle playing it. I tried editing through filmora and it was moving so slowwww that I couldn't do any editing. That's when I tried plugging the SD right into my 2016 Samsung TV and it was jumping from random frame to random frameIt cant do 4k@60fps with h.265 codec, just 30fps. If you want 60 fps with 4k you need to switch to h.264. However, 1080@120 is a beast too, try it
I tried 1080p at 120 fps so that I could use basic editing programs (like Windows Movie Maker) but when I got home, my computer actually couldn't handle the data. Even when I plugged my chip into my 4k Samsung TV it was not handling the data well. I went back and set it to record at 4k at 50 or 40-something frames per second (whichever was the highest option at the time). I also used an ND8 filter to get the greens to pop more. All my light and color settings were set to "auto".That came out nice. What are your video settings? I'm a newb and just got my P4P yesterday. Still setting things up. Haven't flown yet.
Super nice camera and flying moves JxBx80! Looks great! I might add that you should try calibrating your gimble right before takeoff to help with your horizon line being straight from time to time. They def drift here and there but I found that if I calibrate it regularly it helps. Filmora does a decent job too. I used it for about 7-8 months or so. I'm guessing you'll be moving up to Premier or Davinci or Final Cut in the future though. Def a diff in rendering quality and cutting ease! But it cost 29 bucks a month too. Ugh!Was still a challenge to edit with Filmora (probably more my computer's limitations) but I really wanted the output to be 4K. My video below:
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