Just a little update - the Ninja arrived and I did a quick and dirty test.
From what I can see in the moment, there is a bigger difference between the AVCHD and the Ninja, than between the AVCHD and the uncompressed Shuttle.
I have no idea what´s going on here. If I transcode the uncompressed Shuttle material to Cineform, the HDLink says "upresing to 4:2:2" - WTF?
Maybe the shuttle records in 4:2:0 - who knows?
Can someone here please confirm that, just as a sanity check?
Frank
Thread: HDMI Out, 4:2:2 etc,.
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02-08-2012 12:38 AM
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02-08-2012 12:45 AM
Frank, it should be fairly easy to tell 4:2:2 from 4:2:0 - pick a solid and intensive color (like a red flower) and look at its edges (best if against some other primary color background, like Green). If the edge is jagged both horizontally and vertically, it's 4:2:0; the 4:2:2 picture doesn't have horizontal jaggies on vertical edges!
Piotr Wozniacki
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02-08-2012 01:16 AM
Right Piotr, I look at it later - I have an edit to get done instead of playing with my new toys - Grrrrr!
But from a first glance, yeah it looks much more like the pics on that Prepost site.
Which is a good thing, cause it means I can squeeze out more quality with the Samurai, and a bad thing, cause my confidence in BM is sinking.
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02-08-2012 01:28 AM
Frank,
This is very interesting with the Ninja vs Shuttle. Some kind of demonstration would be super useful here!
When I set the output for the FS100 it seems the shuttle doesn't like 1080p, it has to be set to 1080i/720p but then it's supposed to negotiate the highest connection. I do wonder whether this is happening, there's a chance that perhaps the shuttle is negotiating the wrong connection. What's your FS100 set to on the HDMI output and what frame rate are you recording?
You should ask David about the cineform message - under what circumstances would it say that on import, perhaps it's a dumb assumption or perhaps they can tell that it's not real 4:2:2
You can see that the shuttle footage does have a different noise pattern, although Dustin mentions the iframe MPEG compression affecting it but with the shuttle it's fully uncompressed. You can also see the AVC fixing some things too, some edges look different for example. I do wonder whether this implementation of AVC is so well tied to the sensor characteristics that it is also cleaning the image as it goes through...
I really look forward to some sample frames, can you record on both? the Shuttle has HDMI out as well (although if it's negotiating incorrectly i would rather have the Ninja first in the pipeline)
thanks
Paul
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02-08-2012 01:31 AM
Quick finish the real work and get back to playing (i assume you're prepping for your feature?)

I would love to see some examples here, i was talking to someone at BM support the other day. I would like to point them to this thread once we've got something tangible.
cheers
Paul
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02-08-2012 05:32 AM
And once again they have done the dreaded interlace mistake. Their software has deinterlaced the AVCHD material causing jaggies. Just click those files and interprete them to progressive (Premiere) or click their interlace flags to none (final cut) to get rid of them. This is because AVCHD files are actually flagged as interlaced eventhough they are progressive. When you create prores files they are automatically flagged as progressive.
This comparison is thus moot. Postmasters comparison looks more correct.
Funny how something so simple will cause three pages of debate. Nothing to do with compression.Last edited by maarek; 02-08-2012 at 05:37 AM.
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02-08-2012 06:03 AM
Okay, here is a little update.
AVCHD vs. Ninja
I found out, that the FS100 seems to apply a color noise filter, before writing to the card, the HDMI signal is unfiltered.
So I darkened the room a bit (shutters) to provoke noise and recorded at 18/9 and 0 db gain.
In the right picture I added a color noise filter.
This is the 18db sample:
18db.jpg
Tiff download for all 3 gain settings here: http://www.file-upload.net/download-...sktop.rar.htmlfrankglencairn.wordpress.com
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02-08-2012 06:11 AM
If you look at the 400% crop, the Ninja + color noise filter is definitely a step forward.
Crop.jpgfrankglencairn.wordpress.com
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02-08-2012 06:41 AM
I did mention several times i think they'd done something with the AVCHD, i never knew it was flagged as being interlaced at source, i thought AVCHD had moved on from that and supported progressive properly (the older AVC didn't). Certainly FCPX flags them as progressive...
Regardless of that, the thread has had it's effect and we've been looking at the real world differences between AVCHD and other captures, which can make a sizeable difference to post workflow and also in quality too. There's no debate here, just an attempt at finding answers
cheers
PaulLast edited by paulcurtis; 02-08-2012 at 06:48 AM.






