oldarney
11-24-2008, 07:25 AM
I'm using Adobe Premier pro. I'm using sub clips in my sequence. i exported a sub clip and made some changes in audition, when i went back into Premier and replaced the sub clip with the exported clip i found something interesting.
sub clips still maintain the time code of the original master clip, thus if you export it youll get a video with a timecode starting at 0 while the real subclip may start at any point withing its master clip. so when i replace the subclip premier thinks the video is much shorter and all instances in the sequence get skewed and un playable...
here is an example:
subclip A: 10:30-11:00
extracted Subclip A: 0:00-0:30
I don't want to export the massive master clip just to do some sound edits... any workarounds? maybe a way to reset the time code on sub clips...
I'm running windows Xp and premier pro CS4
sub clips still maintain the time code of the original master clip, thus if you export it youll get a video with a timecode starting at 0 while the real subclip may start at any point withing its master clip. so when i replace the subclip premier thinks the video is much shorter and all instances in the sequence get skewed and un playable...
here is an example:
subclip A: 10:30-11:00
extracted Subclip A: 0:00-0:30
I don't want to export the massive master clip just to do some sound edits... any workarounds? maybe a way to reset the time code on sub clips...
I'm running windows Xp and premier pro CS4
