Geebax
 Captain
Australia
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Trampintransit Posted at 2-21 00:16
That wasn't really my point. Just a warning to those who might not be expecting it...I wasn't till I thought about it. Most of us operate in NTSC or PAL 'standard' frame rates. I just seems odd that DJI chose to offer 120 and not 100 also. To someone in 'PALWorld' they might not have realised that 120 is actually 119.8 and thus unlikely to integrate seamlessly into a 25fps timeline in an edit. It seems to me that if you shoot 120 and slomo it along with 50fps stuff and 25fps 'onspeed' footage in a 25 timleine, then the '120 stuff has to give somewhere.
I guess my point was that as a 'PAL' rate person , 100fps would have been more useful and I'm surprised DJI didn't think of that.
I understand your point, but the erroneous PAL/NTSC business annoys the hell out of me, so I try to debunk it whenever I get the chance.
DJI buy in a chip solution, often called 'System On Silicon', to handle the whole video stream, made by a US company, therefore made to suit US applications. The silly part of it is that they are still referring to PAL and NTSC when they do not exist any longer. Any up-to-date country has now retired their analogue transmission systems, and all television is now a derivative of MPEG. They should in fact simply label the frame rates accurately, to the appropriate number of decimal places, and forget the PAL/NTSC referrence, as all it does is confuse the situation further for people with minimal technical expertise. |
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