![]() ![]() It was a complex copy instruction using the Command line in Windows. Somebody posted a solution I never tried. I once googled for methods to join the 4GB sections. Last I looked, HDWriter was not available online. ![]() ![]() If it is a Panasonic, it is probably called HDWriter and it should be on a disc included with the camera. If it is a Sony camera the software is probably called "PlayMemories Home" and is easy to get online. I will look at the camera and brand and see what may be suggested if anything or if relevant proprietary software exists from the company point of view, but I expect nothing from major corporations, and even here Adobe seems inadequate in caring enought to address this issue. Premier Elements 9, 11, 13 were, and now 15 is, fully functional without any of the extra files. The only thing that doesn't function is the Panasonic HDWriter program that I abandon due to severe editing limitations. mts and will import and copy them to my computer. I put the card in the computer, Lightroom finds the still image files and the video files, including the. Outside the camera and any proprietary software belonging to the camera, there is no known purpose.įor a few years I've been using Lightroom for file management. Before I deleted them I did exhaustive research to find their purpose. vpl files did nothing and I've deleted all off them from my computer. As I learned Premier Elements, a little of Windows Movie Maker and a little of Sony Movie Studio I learned the. The are: *.mts, *.cpi, *.mpl and *.vplįor a couple years I carefully copied all off them to my computer using the Panasonic software. My Panasonic AVCHD camcorder creates four files with the same "first" name and different extensions. Which of the NLEs? And what does it do with them? No NLE will use or even see the extra files.ĭue respect Ann, but I disagree. Clips longer than 5 seconds and videos longer than 5 minutes only guarantees sleep. I stopped worrying about it when I figured out that nobody would ever watch long, continous videos. (If it hadn't been a questionable decision to migrate to 4K, that Panasonic camcorder would still be primary in my kit!) Both the Panasonic and Sony software had a few extra tricks they could do that normal NLEs didn't. No NLE will use or even see the extra files. The extra files are used only by the camera itself and the proprietary software that comes with the camera. In the AVCHD system, the camera makes a few extra files with each primary. Premier Elements left a one or two frame gap. The forced 20 minute files joined seamlessly using Panasonic's HDWriter. It was one of the first that would do 1080p60 AVCHD. It has been a long time since I recorded an hour long continuous video with my 2010 Panasonic camcorder. This way Elements will probably use the metadata properly. I might can if you copy entire card to hdd first and then Add Media. If they are not, please suggest outside tools that have worked. Your suggestions and solutions are heartily welcomed, and I would love to find out these issues are fixable in APR. These tools are Any Video Converter, Handbrake, and Filmora.įilmora can merge the files and gets closer on the synch on a conversion of 1 AVCHD file to an. I am testing external conversion program suggested by external web posters. Is is true that APE cannot auto-fix these sync issues when conforming files? I understand this is because the camera may have used variable frame rates, and the converter and editor cannot compensate for the inconsistent frame rates in clips, and thus the synch is lost. mp4 file and load it into APE, even after conforming, the audio is not synced. mts files, or, is there an APE solution for it?Ģ) Now, if I convert the AVCHD into an. mts files are properly audio synched, but they have sound gaps at the end of each file, that will fix when the clips are merged. mts files into APE, there does not appear to be a way to merge the files into one file. This problem started in APE 14 which is why I bought 15.ġ) If I import. I am having two issues with importing/converting. ![]()
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