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Not directly (yet?). But copy and paste works.
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FWIW, same error here. EDIT- Fixed by clean installing. Assume folks have goitten the word by now.
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I would think center-panning them in the timeline would be quicker and easier, especially if the your sequence is properly layed out so that SFX appear (mostly) on their own track(s). Then you can set pan in to out. That said, you haven't explained why you "need" them to be mono, what your next step is, so I may be answering the wrong
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Sure. First I did the math: 1080/1350=0.8 (so 0.8:1 ratio) And Yikes, I made a mistake somewhere because I originally had .079:1! Plugging it into FrameFlex as a Custom Aspect Ratio in Frameflex (now) returns 4:5. Very, very, verry sorry about the false lead.
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Basically, you need to make sure that the frameflex settings for each clip matches your Frame Aspect Ratio (Custom, 18:25) and that Reformat is set to Pillarbox/Letterbox. If you're brave you can make the changes to all the clips in yor bin and then refreshyour sequence. If you're more cautious, you should do it on a clip by clip basis. Any
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Avid itself can merge spanned clips from many different types of cameras. Link to the folder structure rather than individual clips. I like TMPGenc Smart Renderer for combining clips with zero to minor re-encoding. The merge function on Shutter Encoder works very well, but it isn't as intelligent at handling the seams as TMPGenc.
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[quote user="marluc"]Oddly, the best suggestion may also have been the simplest -- to tweak the video quality menu at the bottom of screen! [/quote] Yes. But that wasn't your question. Your questions was how to keep it full rez. Glad you got it sorted to your satisfaction.
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My first choice would be to use Avid's internal industry standard 4K DCI settings that match your source raster with a 2:1 mask margin added. But any of the methods you mentioned will work.
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All of your initial futzing in Photoshop results in TIFF images that are 6000x3375 pixels. (As others have pointed out, dpi is meaningless.) First some thoughts on that: Video systems prefer images and video with even numbered pixels, so I would recommend bumping it up to 6400x3600. (Also, I've never been able to see a difference between a TIFF
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I've been primarily using MPC-HC for years with basically no issues. https://www.videohelp.com/software/Media-Player-Classic-Home-Cinema