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Monday, August 26, 2013

I can't import HD videos from Panasonic into Final Cut Pro 6

Facing issues when importing Panasonic HD media files to Final Cut Pro 6 for editing? The easy workaround is to convert Panasonic 1080p videos to ProRes codec. Below is how.
Panasonic offers wide choices in professional and high-quality camcorders to meet virtually any application, from Full HD 3D and P2 HD to AVCCAM and SD.
I have a Panasonic camcorder which records some 1080p video files, and I use L&T to load the footage to FCP 6 on my iMac. FCP 6 crashed while opening. When I open the program agiain, find out they are not readable? What’s that? I am sure the videos are playable on camera. So strange. Any insight here how can I import these files into FCP 6? Thanks for help.

Many users are facing some frustrating result when importing Panasonic HD videos into Final Cut Pro 6 as above. The basic reason is that MXF is not a fully supported format by Final Cut Pro. So how can you get/import your 1080p recordings to FCP 6 easily for editing? At first, you’d better to transcode Panasonic HD videos to Apple ProRes first, as it is the best codec for Final Cut Pro editing.

Below is the simple step-by-step guide for Panasonic camcorder users: using Pavtube HD Video Converter for Mac to convert Panasonic HD videos to ProRes 422 for FCP on iMac/MacBook Pro with Mac OS X, Leopard, Snow Leopard, Lion, Mountain Lion and Mavericks 10.9. Download it and get the full guide below to have a smooth editing with the Panasonic HD footage in Final Cut Pro 6.

Easily importing and editing Panasonic HD videos in Final Cut Pro 6

Step 1. Get this Mac Panasonic Video Converter installed and load your footages. Click top left icon to load individual 1080p videos files; or click the second one to import the whole folder.



Step 2. Choose proper format for editing in Final Cut Pro 6.

Click Format drop-down list, choose Final Cut Pro>Apple ProRes 422(HQ)(*.mov), as it’s FCPX’s most compatible codec.



The Apple ProRes 422 (HQ) codec offers the utmost possible quality for 4:2:2 or 4:2:0 sources (without an alpha channel) and provides the following:
  • Target data rate of approximately 220 Mbps (1920 x 1080 at 60i)
  • Higher quality than Apple ProRes 422
More options:
Step 3. Fix the output ProRes video settings for FCP 6.

Click Settings at the bottom, you can fix the video size, bitrate, frame rate, etc. The video quality is related with video bitrate, the higher you choose, the larger output file size will be.



Step 4. Start conversion.

Ok now click the "Convert" botton to start converting Panasonic HD footage to ProRes for FCP 6 on Mac. Wait for while, or you can choose to shut down computer after conversion done.