File size can be a real problem. I've done a few videos, mine come out of the camera at around 200MB per minute. That's a lot if you do many hours. In the end I almost stopped because I could never get the whole system - camera bike mount, audio, transfer to computer, editing both for duration and for file size and internet bandwidth requirements.I’ve been watching video of people sharing their rides of the NC500 in Scotland. Many of the videos are 30-60 minutes long, I think because the scenery is so amazing its hard to cut stuff out. If I ever get to go - I’ve booked and cancelled twice..May & September 2020, now rebooked for May 2021, I’ll be shooting everything 5-7 hrs/day, then cut out the boring bits when I get home. I’ve done some 6hr test recordings, the major issue that Ive run into is resolutions & file sizes too large for our 3yr old iMac to deal with..
Nice video...I saved your menu page so I can watch more later..What camera did you use & what recording settings? Looks like you mounted the camera on the brake reservoir, I have mine chin mounted on my helmet with a remote battery inside my jacket.File size can be a real problem. I've done a few videos, mine come out of the camera at around 200MB per minute. That's a lot if you do many hours. In the end I almost stopped because I could never get the whole system - camera bike mount, audio, transfer to computer, editing both for duration and for file size and internet bandwidth requirements.
Some of mine I find boring, but there's one I'm quite pleased with here, from this page, part of a group run in Scotland, A896 through Strathcarron near Loch Carron. If you do view it, turn your sound down first! It's about 18 minutes long, should have been edited to about 3!
These are reduced to about 10MB per minute, and hosted from a professional server; my server's Internet bandwidth isn't quite reliably good enough.
Camera is a Tomtom Bandit. Settings: video "2.7k 30fps", wide angle, exposure automatic. Pretty much point and shoot.Nice video...I saved your menu page so I can watch more later..What camera did you use & what recording settings? Looks like you mounted the camera on the brake reservoir, I have mine chin mounted on my helmet with a remote battery inside my jacket.
Video reduction was done using a command line-driven program, ffmpeg, on a Mac. It's driven through home-brewed php software (I play a lot with php for virtually everything on my web site), it would do the reduction, create the thumbnail still, pick the necessary data for duration and so on, and upload it to the remote server. I've not done any significant editing beyond that. The last was done some years ago, the last time I tried it, ffmpeg didn't function, probably because the Mac's operating system has been updated.What program do you use for editing, and if you dont mind the plethora of questions...what do you do your editing on, and what are it’s specs?
I’m using a GoPro Hero 7 Black, using DaVinci Resolve on a 3 yr old iMac with an i5 processor..
Resolves a goodern alright. Hard to beat it without going into ludicrous costs. I also use iMovie and Affinity Photo for stills. Handbrake is also great to have for changing encoding types (MP4, MOV, etc.).What program do you use for editing, and if you dont mind the plethora of questions...what do you do your editing on, and what are it’s specs?
I’m using a GoPro Hero 7 Black, using DaVinci Resolve on a 3 yr old iMac with an i5 processor..
Yes you are right, Great tip. Do you have any vlog experience before?Too many post un/under edited videos on Youtube and other places. If you're going to do that, step above the noise and make you videos short and have a script for a voice over narration (instead of the ramblings that happen when the video is recording).
If you shoot 5 hours of video, the end product should be the best 5 minutes you can cut together.
Enter your email address to join: