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  1. The "captured" DV file has the same quality as the picture on the type! But this file is compressed - is that so? And if it is - is there a method to "capture" uncompress file (for expamle Premiere Pro)? What is the size of this file ?
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  2. Mod Neophyte redwudz's Avatar
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    If you are transferring in DV format, you can't change what the camera or DV device is outputting, that's done in hardware. DV is about 5:1 compression. What you see is what you get. It would make no difference what program is doing the importing to the computer.
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    DV AVI transfered from your camera to your HD will be about 13GB per hour.
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  4. Always Watching guns1inger's Avatar
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    The compression occurs in the camera, not when you transfer to the PC. What's done is done.
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  5. Thanks for the info dudes !

    And one more question. When exporting in Premiere DV file to Uncompressed file is there an improvement in the picture quality because i don't see such but the file get larger ?
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  6. Member Cornucopia's Avatar
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    There will be no improvement when going from already DV-compressed file to Uncompressed, except if you are going to do certain types of chroma-key compositing (and even then, the worst has already been done).

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  7. Member thecoalman's Avatar
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    Originally Posted by Lucid_Dream

    And one more question. When exporting in Premiere DV file to Uncompressed file is there an improvement in the picture quality because i don't see such but the file get larger ?
    That could even compromise the quality, might need a microscope to see it but any time you convert a video to another format some loss of quality is to be expected. Best to do as little as possible to it. I work with DV all the time and my method is simple. I import the video into my editor as source files, once the project is complete I export as DVD compliant MPEG. It's the shortest possible way to go from DV-AVI to MPEG. The video only goes through a single conversion. Some editors don't allow for MPEG export or you may want to use a different encoder not supported by your editor, if that is the case export as DV-AVI and encode that to MPEG with your encoder.
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  8. Do someone know the exporting deinterlaced method of premiere pro 1.5 progressive scan which is - Bob or the "real" progressive scan Bob+Weave ?! And in all cases i have to keep the video interlaced for better quality , haven't i ?
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  9. Member thecoalman's Avatar
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    Originally Posted by Lucid_Dream
    And in all cases i have to keep the video interlaced for better quality , haven't i ?
    For playing on a TV you want to keep it interlaced. You can leave it interlaced for computer playback too since most players deinterlace on the fly.
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