Panasonic MotionDV STUDIO 5.6E LE eng User Manual

Page 245

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Q&A

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Recording on a tape cannot be performed normally

The video recorded on a tape appears for a

moment to be a still image.

• In order not to produce a blank part at any transition

when recording video on a tape, 1 frame (1/25
second <for the NTSC system, 1/30 second>) is
recorded several times at the transitions of
continuous video.

The sound recorded on a video tape is

interrupted.

• If video clips which are different in the sound

sampling frequency (32 kHz, 48 kHz, etc.),
quantifying bit number (12 bit, 16 bit, etc.), and
format type are mixed, the sound may be played
intermittently at the points where the sound mode
changes.

The sampling frequency of the video data

outputted is different from that of the original
data.

• You can select the sampling frequency when you

output video data to a video device or output video

data as AVI files. When you output video data in 2 or

more types of sampling frequencies, the sampling

frequency of the data is unified to the one you

selected.

After recording on a tape, the photo index signal

and date information that existed originally have
disappeared.

• When videos imported to a PC are rendered with

special effects, the date information and photo

(scene) index signals of the recording will be erased.

The date information will also be erased when the

video is output with an aspect ratio which has been

changed.

However, if you record captured video without

adding any special effects to it (without rendering) or

without changing its aspect ratio, this information is

maintained.

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