I have been reading a lot of posts about FCP an XDCam and there was always something missing in the "how-to" of XD to timeline.
It seems easier to understand when you have it front of you. I thought I'd try to narrate the blow-by-blow for those looking for more detail.
The background details:
I used a G5 Dual 2.5GHz with 4.5gig RAM with FCP v6 from the studio 2 suite.
Shot 1080 60I on a Sony PDW330
It was 2:30 in the afternoon.
Days before the test....
The XDCam camera comes with a disk. None of the software on the disk was useable for us Mac G5 users.
In my haste on various user groups I missed the important what to download from the Sony site.
I know from the topic threads that there was something to download but It was not apparent on the Sony site - I visited for a an hour trying to find the right download. I have a trash bin of .exe and zip files not usable on the G5.
As is normal on the web I failed to follow through on what I was looking for and left this detail to the last minute during the test. Certainly not anyone to blame but myself.
2:30Pm test day
I opened a new project and used the easy setup to load preset for the XDCam 1080I project.
This is when I realized my "what was I looking for" web misadventure. I plugged in the iLink or firewire cable to the camera and the computer. It did not show me a drive on the desktop as I expected nor did I get an import option identified as XDCam. My computer system disk utilities saw the firewire cable and correctly identified the camera connected.
I'm now stuck. FCP was not "seeing" the camera or the files on the disk.
Time to hit the web for answers.
I finally found a post that linked to
www.sonybiz.net/xdcam for the download of the correct file for FCP use.
The XDCam HD cinealta user group at DVinfo.net was very helpful for this info.
3:10pm
I had the software installed. I had my project already set now for the recommended procedure.
Before I launched FCP Plug in the iLink or firewire cable to the camera.
On the desktop I see an Icon of a XDCam disk with a numeral for a name.
Select the icon and "apple" + "I" for the information box. Use this box to rename the disk.
This is for your sanity so pick a short descriptor.
After renaming the disk, eject it from the desktop. This will eject it from the camera. Reinsert it.
The desktop icon will reappear with the new name. Now you are ready for the FCP import.
Launch FCP, go to the Menu "File" - "Import"
now I see the XDCam option. small celebration again.
When I choose the XDCam option the new transfer software launches.
The first time there are set up options
Things to consider for your set up --Choose wisely grasshopper.--
1. Lo rez proxy and data file destination and storage- lives on your computer til delete do you part.
2. full rez file destination and storage- bandwidth is critical for these files.
3. export temporary files - not big files and temporary only
After selecting your setup options the software quickly populate the window to mirror the XDCam files in the deck.
another celebration.
This software is useful for a producer or a paper edit. I saw a question posted about what to give a producer with a Mac.
My guess is that you can duplicate the low rez proxy and data file home with the Mac producer.
I imported a few files and timed it. It took nearly 2/3 real time to transfer the data. It runs in the background so it feels quick.
I like the way the software allows you to keep working on selecting or trimming clips.
by 4:12pm I had edited a 1:00 sequence with the new XDCam footage.
I was ready to export.
More on the export next time.
Cheers!