View: 2354|Reply: 0
|
Convert/Import/Join Panasonic HC-X900/X900M 1080 60p/50p AVCHD MTS to FCP 7
[Copy link]
|
|
[B]Panasonic HC-X900[/B] is an enthusiast 3MOS-based (three 1/4.1-inch CMOS sensors are used) camcorder that records full HD 1920 x 1080 videos at 60p (50p for PAL units) based on the new AVCHD 2.0 (Progressive) standard. Like its predecessors, it has a 12x optical zoom lens (which starts at 29.8mm at the wide-angle end), supports 5.1-channel surround sound, and has a lens ring for manual controls.
The [B]HC-X900M[/B] also shoots full HD 3D video when you attach it with an optional 3D conversion lens. However, this isn’t the same conversion lens as the one introduced in 2011 (VW-CLT1). The new VW-CLT2 is not only smaller but also brighter (from F3.2 to F2.0). The HC-X900/HC-X900M HD camera stores videos in .mts format with MPEG-4 AVC/H.264 compression.
[B]Final Cut Pro 7[/B] is new released with powerful new features like expanded ProRes codecs, improved speed/XML interchange/media management, etc and some time-saving improvements like automatic transfer, easy export, and so on. However, this new released FCP 7 supports AVCHD with at 1080p 24/25/30, 1080i 50/60, 720p 24/25/30/50/60, so the 1080 60p/50p MTS/M2TS is still incompatible with Mac FCP 7 NOW!
So if you want to edit HC-X900/X900M 1080 60p/50p 28Mbps in Final Cut Pro 7, you are recommended to use Panasonic Video Converter for Mac, which is the superior [B]Mac Panasonic 60p/50p MTS to FCP 7 converter[/B] for Snow Leopard. It does not only convert Panasonic 1080 60p/50p AVCHD to MOV on Mac, but also merges 1080 60p/50p MTS files for import into Final Cut Pro 7.
Here is the step-by-step guide for you to import and edit Panasonic HC-X900/X900M 60p/50p MTS to Final Cut Pro 7 on iMac/MacBook Pro with Mac OS X like Mountain Lion, Lion, Snow Leopard.
Step 1. Load AVCHD 1080 60p/50p videos to [B]Panasonic Video Converter for Mac from UFUSoft[/B].
After transferring .mts files from Panasonic HC-X900/X900M camera, run AVCHD Converter for Mac as the best Mac 1080 60p/50p MTS to MOV converter, and click the “Add File” button to load .mts videos.
Step 2. Choose H.264/AVC MOV or ProRes 422 MOV output format.
Click the “Format” option, and choose HD Video or Common Video > H.264 MOV (AVC)(*.mov) for converting AVCHD videos from MTS to MOV with H.264/AVC as video codec for loading to Final Cut Studio. With this option, the output video will be kept as high definition 1920×1080. (You can also choose [B]Final Cut Pro > Apple ProRes 422(HQ) (*.mov) [/B]as output format.
Step 3. Merge Panasonic AVCHD files. (optional)
Select all the files and then click “Merge”, and the Panasonic HC-X900/X900M 1080 60p/50p MTS converter will join and combine the video clips into a single file as output.
Step 4. Convert HC-X900/X900M MTS to MOV for Final Cut Pro 7.
Click the convert button under the preview window, the Mac Panasonic MTS converter starts [B]converting 1080 60p/50p MTS videos to H.246 .mov or ProRes .mov[/B], and joining the MTS files for editing in Final Cut Pro 7.
After converting and merging the MTS files, just import the output files to Final Cut Pro 7 and the video is in HD 1920×1080. You can also import the output videos to Final Cut Express (FCE) 4 for editing in full HD.
Read More :
2014 Best Blu-ray Player Video/Media Software for Windows 8.1 Blue/8 Review
2014 the Best Windows 7 Blu-ray Player Software Review-Free Download for Play BD Disc on Windows 7
Blu-ray Player Software for Windows 7/8/8.1 Review : UFUSoft Blu-ray Player
Panasonic HC-V550 and Premiere Pro-Edit AVCHD MTS in Premiere on Mac
Convert Panasonic HC-X920 Videos to ProRes 422 for Final Cut Pro
How to Import/Edit Sony HDR-AS10 HD MP4 to Final Cut Pro X on Mac Mavericks/Mountain Lion?
How to Import/Edit Canon HF R400 MTS to Final Cut Pro X on iMac/MacBook Pro?
Nikon MOV to FCP X-Edit Nikon D3200 1080p MOV in Final Cut Pro X on Mac
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|