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Must be something in the math. Perhaps the track wasn't exactly at 2x? or the project is set for 60i when the footage is at 50i. I would think that you could do it by trial and error playing with a small portion of the track and experimenting with the percentage slow-down. Good luck.
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I use a Sony Z1 camera and had the same headaches until I turned the quickrec feature in the camera off. I know this doesn't help you with your current problem, but it might help for the future.
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You can also try to export to quicktime movie rather than quicktime reference.
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Appears this camera has a USB connection. Avid will only capture via Firewire (aka iLink or IEEE1394). Make sure you are connecting to computer with firewire only.
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The program creates the m2t file on the disk first and then streams it to the HDV device. Sounds like the device may have timed out when the program started to send frames.
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My camera is the Sony ...Z1
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Yes. I got so frustrated with finding in and out points on tape or subsequent batch capture failures that I now capture the entire tape to disk before doing anything with it. This increases the amount of footage that is on the HDD, but it certainly reduces the frustration level.
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In researching similar problems with Xpress Pro (same software base), I learned that there is a "Control Track" as well as a time-code track on the tape. The lack of capture comes from a break in the "Control Track". This doesn't help your current situation, but for the future, try turning the "QUICKREC" function in
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Some of the earlier editors toolkits from Digital Juice included fonts.
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If you change the downconvert setting in the camera, you need to physically disconnect the camera from the computer (and then reconnect it) in order for the computer to recognize the new setting.