koronoru wrote:trythil wrote:the Black Monarch wrote:Premiere automatically duplicates frames when you put 23.9 FPS footage into a 24 FPS timeline.
Who said I used Premiere?
He does sort of have a point, though - do you really
need to edit directly from the DVDs? Because if you're ripping to hard drive first, it should be possible to do the equivalent of AssumeFPS in your rip, without having to do the recompression that I think you're trying to avoid. I'm pretty sure transcode will let you pass through an MPEG stream and just change the frames-per-second code without changing anything else. Here's a thought:
* Rip to 29.970. Speed it up 0.1% to get 30.
* Make a sped-up copy of your soundtrack. You can do that by making the soundtrack as a raw PCM file and using sox to resample it from 44100 to 44144; then tell the editor that it's still 44100 audio.
* Animate at 30, using the sped-up soundtrack.
* Edit at 30 using the sped-up source material, the 30fps animation, and the sped-up soundtrack.
* Slow it down to 29.970 and do your final encode using the original really 44100 soundtrack.
* If you want a 23.976 version, apply whatever inverse telecining. This will suck for the animation that was done at 30, but you said you couldn't do the IVTC first (which is what I'd prefer).
Basically the same thing the Premiere users do, because it too can't handle fractional framerates.
Well, I don't have to edit from the exact DVD data. It is possible to inverse telecine before I do anything; I'll end up with a very nice 23.976fps stream to work from, and Cinelerra will handle that just fine at that framerate.
Here's the reason why I haven't been doing that, though: The problem is that I'm a stickler for quality, and it's very difficult to retain the original DVD quality with the same size. Any conversion that I do inevitably leads me to re-compress the video data into a very lossless, but VERY big, file.
However, until now, I didn't know that transcode would let me pass through an MPEG stream and just change the fps...I always thought that it did some sort of recompression no matter what you did. I'll have to give that a try...
For now, though, I've just been generating the 3D scenes at 30fps, and then slowing them 0.1% to 29.97fps, which I think is a variant of the things that people have been telling me to do in the first place

I get 29.97fps progressive this way (which is weird, I know), but it's easy to re-interlace, so I
think I'll be OK. The MPEG-2 copy output to TV will reveal the correctness (or, much more likely, horrible incorrectness) of what I'm doing...