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Recordit 30 fps1/12/2024 Very doable but not a guranteed and officially supported format for home authoring, I do agree.īurned 1080 60p disks can be made using various authoring tools which play just fine both in BluRay and red laser AVCHD disk formats. Burned 1080 60p disks can be made using various authoring tools which play just fine both in BluRay and red laser AVCHD disk formats using such tools as TSMUXER, MULTIAVCHD, with Power Director and some players like my Panasonic play them at 1080 60p without complaint. You're right, BluRay burners as well as BD-R blanks are now a lot less expensive, but do cost 3-4 times the cost of red laser burners and blank disks.īluRay does truly support 60 frame per second 1080 progressive format, but the spec provides it officially for pressed commercial BD-ROM such as most Hollywood releases. In Premier-Pro (but not Encore) there is an option for "frame blending" which can smooth things out. If you want to make a conventional Blu-ray recording, the frame rate will be 30 fps even if the original is 60 fps. No expensive BluRay burner or blank BluRay disks are needed.īlu-ray burners are not expensive these days - check prices. These disks are playable on both BluRay players and many / most computers. But if you don't need DVDs, I would just avoid them.īluRay disks and current players actually do support 1080 progressive at 60 fps.Īlso, so-called AVCHD disks can be made using conventional blank DVDs and burners which CAN record and playback up to 1080 60 interlaced frames per second. You'll have to decide if producing DVDs is important for you - for example, if you were a wedding videographer, most people would probably want videos of the wedding on DVD or Blu-ray. Also, I think that Blu-ray doesn't support 1080/60p.) It is possible to create a data DVD (not a video DVD) that contains 1080i or 1080p video files that will then play in a computer with a DVD or Blu-ray drive, but such disks will not work in a stand-alone DVD or Blu-ray player.īecause of these hassles and limitations, I no longer produce DVDs. As far as I know, regular video DVDs (that play in stand-alone DVD players) do not support 1080i or 1080p video at all (I'm sure someone will correct me if I am wrong on this. I either play videos on my computer, put them on a USB thumb drive to play on a USB input of a Blu-ray player or the USB input of an HDTV, or put them online. I used to create DVDs, but it has probably been 4 or 5 years since the last time I created a DVD. Of the choices given, 60p 28M (PS) will give the highest quality and will handle motion the best. So, how to select the best recording setting with less jerking from the following recording setting, 60i 24M (FX), 60i 17M (FH), 60p 28M (PS), 24p 24M (FX) and 24p 17M (FH)? I also want to record it on the regular DVD because I do not have Bluray DVD burner. My camera other 60 recording setting is 60i 24M (FX) and 60p 28M (PS) but they can only be recorded on the Bluray DVD. The difference is 24p sharper than 60i a little.
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