![]() ![]() This seems at least to me to be a signifigant enough drawback of the Sony a6000 that it would be somthing I would have read about in weighing the pros and cons of getting the camera. This lack of whole 'real' frames makes editing and color manipulation tough to be exact, which is why they don't support it.at least that's what I remember reading. Here we got one of the more popular consumer cameras on the one side and a color grading authority on the other, and in order for them to be sufficiently compatible I have to either buy some converter program, or somthing like this? Resolve does not natively support Avchd, which is a witches brew of encoding and compression techniques that does not really have a unique whole recorded frame. It seems wherever I look that is the only answer.īut the reason I made this thread is because this just seems so stupid. When I try to import my Sony a6000 files into DaVinci resolve, it does not accept the audio from those files.įrom my research, there is no answer other than to buy a Mac, or to give my files a new "wrapper." There are programs out there, one suggested by someone on this forum in a thread like this one, that will do this, all the while apparently maintaining the file's quality reduction. ![]() ![]() I have a Sony a6000, and from what I gather I am shooting in some format called AVCHD. ![]()
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