Apple Final Cut Pro 5 User Manual

Page 1653

Advertising
background image

302

Part IV

Settings and Preferences

There are several kinds of presets, each accessible from the corresponding tab in the
Audio/Video settings window:

 Capture Presets: These determine the dimensions, frame rate, codec, and interfaces

used when capturing media files to disk. This group of settings is used during
capture and usually matches the format of your source tapes. Different capture
presets allow you to quickly set up Final Cut Pro to capture a wide range of video
formats. For details, see Chapter 24, “

Capture Settings and Presets

,” on page 315.

 Device Control Presets: These settings establish how a camcorder, VTR, or other video

or audio device communicates with Final Cut Pro via remote control protocols and
timecode. You choose a device control preset whenever you connect a video or
audio device for logging, capturing, or output. For more information, see Chapter 25,

Device Control Settings and Presets

,” on page 323.

 Sequence Presets: These determine the video and audio formats of a sequence, such

as image dimensions, frame rate, codec, color space, sampling rate, and bit depth.
Unlike a capture preset, which determines the format of captured (incoming) media
files, a sequence preset determines the format used during editing, which affects
real-time performance and your output format. New sequences automatically use
the settings specified in the currently selected sequence preset, but you can change
a sequence’s settings after it has been created by choosing Sequence > Settings.

Important:

When your media files’ settings and sequence settings don’t match, you

usually see a red render bar in the Timeline, indicating that all the media needs to be
converted to the sequence settings before real-time playback or output. In most
cases, you’ll want to use matching capture and sequence presets so Final Cut Pro
doesn’t need to render media files just to play back.

For more information, see Chapter 26, “

Sequence Settings and Presets

,” on page 335.

 A/V Devices: This tab allows you to choose which video and audio interfaces you use

for external monitoring during editing and for output to tape. These settings
determine if and how you monitor external video and audio.

Note: Unlike the other tabs, the A/V Devices tab does not have a list of presets to
choose from. However, they are included with every Easy Setup.

For details, see Volume I, Chapter 16, “External Video Monitoring.”

Advertising