1 / 18

Working with P2 Cams

Working with P2 Cams. Chapter 6 & 7. Working with P2 and Audio Video formats. General P2 card P2 Workflow. General. P2 HD P2 HD is a full production-quality, high-definition recording system that utilizes removable solid-state memory cards.

bob
Download Presentation

Working with P2 Cams

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Working with P2 Cams Chapter 6 & 7

  2. Working with P2 and Audio Video formats • General • P2 card • P2 Workflow

  3. General • P2 HD • P2 HD is a full production-quality, high-definition recording system that utilizes removable solid-state memory cards. • Compatible with PCs and existing file-based IT infrastructures, P2 HD content is recorded as independent frames, can be randomly accessed and easily transferred. • Contents can be archived onto, low-cost consumer media such as hard drives or other affordable current IT storage technology and future-based systems.

  4. General • P2 Transfer • Transferring the cards to Mac: • From Final Cut Pro you select “Import…Panasonic P2” or “Log and Transfer” from the File menu. A window shows you each clip and you can select which ones to import. • You should be able to "capture” a couple hours of video in less than a half hour.

  5. General • How does P2 record? • P2 cards record by storing the footage as pre-digitized computer files. Instead of recording the video as “video data,” they record the footage as computer data files. • These data are stored on P2 cards, without the restrictions of needing proprietary video decks or having to wait for real-time transfers. • P2 cards record in universally interchangeable MXF data files, they are immediately usable by properly configured Windows and Macintosh computers. • The P2 card itself uses the FAT32 file system, which makes the card compatible with both Macintosh and Windows systems.

  6. Importing P2 Footage • Final Cut Pro’s P2 Import Window • The upper left section of the window is a clip Browser which will display all of the clips on the P2 cards. • If you select a clip, you can audition the clip in the Preview window upper right, (previews run from the P2 card). The preview section also has 'mark in/out' buttons to trim up your clips before importing. • In the lower right section you can rename your clip and add additional information. When you have viewed and named the clips and are ready to import,

  7. Importing P2 Footage • Select the clips in the clip Browser and either drag the selection down into the 'Drag media here' window, lower left, or with the clips selected, click on the 'Add Selection to Queue'. • The 'Drag media here' area turns into a clip queue, and the import process begins automatically. • You can also import clips one at a time from the Preview window by clicking on the 'Add Clip to Queue'. If you click on the 'Import Settings' tab you can choose to import audio and video, audio only or video only. • Import times will average about 8 minutes per 16GB P2 card. Now that’s much faster than capturing from tape!

  8. Archiving P2 Footage • Important tip :archiving of your P2 footage before you import it into FCP. • P2 stores it’s data in the MXF file format. • Final Cut Pro does not work with MXF natively. Instead it unwraps the MXF data and rewraps it in Quicktime during the import process. • This might not be a big deal for some but if you ever need to move your footage to another editing platform, having the original MXF files will be important.

  9. P2 card • P2 card • P2 cards are high-precision micro-computers with their own processors, firmware, a RAID controller that manages the data files. • The newest generation of P2 cards dispenses with using individual SD memory cards and actually uses the core memory components.

  10. P2 card • P2 cards have been manufactured in 2GB, 4GB, 8GB, 16GB and 32GB capacities. The current cards offered on the market are 16GB and 32GB in size. • To establish a P2 card's recording time, you have to determine two factors: what recording format you will use and what capacity of P2 card you’re planning on using. The calculation is quite simple after that. • For DVCPRO or DV, the data rate is 4 minutes per gigabyte • For DVCPRO50 or AVC-Intra 50, the data rate is 2 minutes per gigabyte • For DVCPRO HD or AVC Intra 100, the data rate is 1 minute per gigabyte

  11. P2 card

  12. P2 card • A 32GB P2 card is capable of storing more than two hours of DVCPRO footage • (32 gigabytes × 4 minutes per GB), more than one hour of DVCPRO50 (32 GB × 2 minutes per GB), or 32 minutes of AVC-Intra 100 or DVCPRO-HD. • Mstorage capacity is available in DVCPRO-HD 720P and AVC-Intra 720P and 1080P modes.

  13. P2 card • the P2 card is interchangeable across the entire P2 HD/P2 lineup of products. Any P2 card can be used in any P2-compatible device • Panasonic has introduced the new AVC-Intra format. With the introduction of AVC-Intra, all the same P2 cards and P2 readers work immediately with the new format. • P2 HD camcorder allows for simultaneous recording to its internal P2 cards as well as to an external recorder attached by 1394 (aka “firewire”), when recording to DV, DVCPRO, DVCPRO50 or DVCPRO HD formats. • However, a couple of exceptions due to the nature of external recording units and the 1394/firewire transport protocol. If recording using AVC-Intra, AVC-Intra doesn’t travel across the 1394 port so a FireStore would not be capable of recording that mode. • Also in 720pN mode, wherby firewire transport is disabled, a FireStore or other 1394 recording device could not be used for simultaneous recording when in DVCPRO-HD 720pN mode.

  14. P2 Workflow • P2 cards are storage devices for computer data. Hence, you can use any computer and any storage device that you would use for any other computer data. • For data management and copying the P2 card contents, Panasonic makes available the P2 Contents Management System (also known as “P2CMS”). • This free software utility organizes your P2 footage into an easily managed database and gives you the ability to rename and annotate clips and enter all sorts of descriptive metadata. • P2CMS also provides the ability to copy P2 card contents to a hard disk or a P2 card.

  15. P2 Workflow • To archive, you can use any commercially available, off-the-shelf archival method, including DVD-R, Blu-Ray data discs, or computer tape archive systems such as DLT or LTO2/LTO3/LTO4. • Some companies make archival systems designed specifically to work with MXF files (such as those found on P2 cards). An example would be the Quantum SDLT-600A DLT tape drive, which is optimized for working with MXF files.

  16. Nonlinear editing systems and P2 • Virtually every popular nonlinear editing system works with P2 Footage, including: • Apple Final Cut Pro 5.0.4 and later • Adobe Premiere Pro CS3 version 3.1 and later • Newtek Speed Edit • Grass Valley EDIUS Broadcast • Avid XPress Pro HD 5.2.3 or later • Avid Liquid 7.2 or later • Avid Media Composer • Avid NewsCutter • Avid Unity

  17. Nonlinear editing systems and P2

  18. Audio from HVX • The HVX-200 is capable of recording fantastic audio. While recording onto P2 Cards, the camera always records four channels of 16-bit audio sampled at 48KHz. • Two of these are XLR inputs for external mics and two are the onboard mic. • Phantom power is available for the XLRs, but you can only set and view the levels on channel 1 and 2. • Hence to get 4 useable channels, you need to set your levels for channel 3 and 4 and then adjust your input levels for 1 and 2 externally if possible. There should at least be some sort of a level balance in the Menu items.

More Related