Capturing footage past timecode hour 23, How to avoid capturing clips with timecode breaks – Apple Final Cut Pro 6 User Manual

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Part IV

Logging, Capturing, and Importing

Since most timecode breaks happen between the end of one shot and the beginning
of another, they’re pretty easy to avoid if you log your footage one clip at a time. Still, if
Final Cut Pro captures a clip with either type of timecode break, the timecode that
Final Cut Pro captures and writes to that clip’s source file on disk will be incorrect from
the point of the break forward. Since the timecode is incorrect, you will be unable to
use that clip with any Final Cut Pro function that requires accurate timecode, such as
batch capturing, media management with the Media Manager, or EDL export.

How to Avoid Capturing Clips with Timecode Breaks

The “On timecode break” pop-up menu in the General tab of the User Preferences
window gives you several ways to avoid capturing clips with timecode breaks. It’s
important to set this option to suit the way you intend to capture your clips. You have
several options:

 Make New Clip: This is the default option. Video that’s already been captured before

the break in timecode is saved as a single media file, with its Out point set to the
frame occurring immediately before the timecode break. Final Cut Pro then
automatically continues capturing video after the dropped timecode frame as a
second media file. When this option is selected, clips captured after timecode breaks
are named with the original name and the number of the clip. For example, if the
first captured clip’s name is “Cats Playing,” the second clip’s name is set to “Cats
Playing-1.”

This is a good option to choose if you are capturing an entire tape. For example,
suppose you are capturing the entire contents of a 60-minute tape that has four
timecode breaks. Instead of restarting the capture every time a timecode break is
detected, Final Cut Pro captures all media from the tape as five clips, skipping over each
timecode break and ensuring that the timecode of all captured media is frame-accurate.

Capturing Footage Past Timecode Hour 23

When you capture footage that spans timecode hour 23 and timecode hour 00,
Final Cut Pro handles this timecode transition as a timecode break. If you choose the
Make New Clip option from the “On timecode break” pop-up menu in the General tab of
the User Preferences window, Final Cut Pro creates two clips. The Media Start timecode
of the second clip begins shortly after the pre-roll time specified in the Editing tab of the
User Preferences window has passed. This provides sufficient pre-roll time for the VTR to
recapture the clip later while avoiding the timecode break.

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