Apple Final Cut Pro 5 User Manual

Page 1537

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Part III

Output

Three methods of electronic editing exist, each with increasing precision and quality:

 Hard (or crash) recording: This method begins laying video signal on tape as soon as

the record button is pressed, without waiting for a pre-roll period in which the VTR
motor can get up to speed. Crash records cause breaks in the video signal. If you
have ever recorded a television show with a consumer VCR, you have performed a
crash record simply by pressing the record button. The recording ends abruptly
when you press stop, which causes a break in the video signal. Both “In” and “Out”
points of a crash edit cause noticeable breaks in the video signal on tape.

Note: Crash recording onto a tape is a manual process. The Edit to Tape window only
works when device control is connected and timecode is present on the videotape,
so you can’t create crash edits in this window. You can, however, create crash edits on
tape by pressing the record button directly on your camcorder or deck, and
recording the video output of Final Cut Pro using either the Print to Video command
or the direct video output of the Timeline.

 Assemble edits: Assemble edits use a pre-roll time before the edit In point to let the

VTR motor get up to speed and continue recording a consistent signal once the edit
begins. The result is a smooth edit at the In point. All tracks on the tape, including
video, audio, timecode, and control tracks, are replaced. The Out point of an
assemble edit ends abruptly, similar to a crash edit, because there is a discrepancy
between the timing of the newly recorded signal and the one that already existed on
the tape (if the tape wasn’t blank).

 Insert edits: Insert edits only replace selected tracks, such as the video track, or two

audio channels. The control track on the tape is never replaced, which keeps the tape
playing at the proper speed while the other tracks are replaced. Both In and Out edit
points are smooth. Professional tape-to-tape editing systems use pre-blacked video
tapes and use insert editing exclusively.

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