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What it sounds like to me is a frame rate mismatch.
Another thing to check is the audio... is it 41.1Khz audio exported as a 48KHz video?
It sounds like frame rate mismatch to me. Frame rate can be 23.976, 24, 29.97, 30 etc etc. If you shoot at one rate, record sound in another rate, and edit in a timeline of a different rate, things can get weird quickly. To add to the problem, most Sony cameras say 24 fps, but actually record at 23.976. You, as a trusting soul, select "24 fps" in the Sony menu, and choose 24 fps in your Premiere timeline. Guess what happens? In short scenes it might not be enough to notice, but as you go longer the drift will keep increasing.
Go through the production chain and and I bet you'll find a mismatch between sound, video, and NLE somewhere.
He means 44.1kHz.
Audio doesn't depend on frame rate at all, so if you go searching for problems there, you won't find a solution.
Audio doesn't depend on frame rate at all, so if you go searching for problems there, you won't find a solution.
Everything in the sound world depends on sample rate, and an audio recorder that has TC sync is actually using the 48kHz word clock and merely stamping TC headers as metadata. Audio for video runs at a native 48kHz, and drift comes from slight inconsistencies in sample rate especially with non-sync (and doubly so with low-cost) recorders. The timing crystals in a camera and a non-sync audio recorder may vary slightly from an absolute 48,000Hz, +/- a few (single-digit) Hz. The computer is playing back at an absolute 48,000Hz, so those imperfections cause drift over time. Nowhere does TC frame rate have any impact on this.
I deliver a 1hr mp4 1080p video - customer play it on Apple iMac, and the audio
and video get out of sync after around 30mins. Did a search, and Apple iMac has that problem
is there a solution for Mac ?