Adobe Premiere Pro CS4 | ![]() |
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Display 24p source timecodeWhen you import 24p footage, Adobe Premiere Pro treats it as 23.976 fps progressive footage. Because of this, when you work with 24p footage in a 24p project, the timecode is displayed as 24 fps. However, the camera records and logs 24p footage in 30 fps non-drop‑frame timecode. When you log 24p footage for capture, you log clips according to the camera’s timecode count of 30 fps non-drop-frame timecode. For example, a clip that you log for capture may have an In point of 00:01:00:28. However, as an offline clip in a 24p project, the In point is shown as 00:01:00:23. In addition, mixing non-drop-frame footage with drop-frame footage can cause larger differences in timecode display between the project and the clip, with minutes, seconds, and entire durations seemingly out of sync. Be aware of these discrepancies as you edit. If you use 30 fps non-drop-frame timecode for projects containing 24p footage, Adobe Premiere Pro drops every fifth frame from the 24p footage timecode count. When you view the properties of your 24p clip, the frame rate is shown as 23.976, but the timebase as 29.97. If you’d prefer to read a clip’s original timecode, do the following:
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