It would be very handy to have multiples of 23.976 and 24fps as an output option for frame interpolation.
You can just type into the field what you want. I know most things with drop-downs donāt let you, but this one does.
I would call this feature request complete, unless you really want those two options to be in that drop-down list.
Iād like to propose a selection for āDoubleā. It is likely to be the most common selection for anyone wanting to bump up the frame rate, but in a way that nicely produces one real, one interpolated, ā¦
As an aside, what does Topaz do if you gave a source of say 23.976 and select 50fps? Very few of the source frames would line up with output frames. Are all output frames interpolated from a high resolution timestamp position?
2X FPS a must. having to manually type in the exact framerate to double it is annoying. Please add this option.
What you are asking is to turn a standardized FPS into a non-standardized FPS that will most likely be unplayable on many devices
Thatās because either FPS comes from cinema 24,000 fps
or from digital media 23,976⦠fps
But they are still a fraction encoded in the stream and you can get 10 digits after the decimal point if you want
Cheating like this is a sure way to get asynchronous video/audio or untoned sound
The longer is your stream, the stronger is the drama.
48fps and 48000/1001 are standard frame rates, though. It has been used for several big budget movies, like famously The Hobbit, but also Avatar and Titanic were shot at twice the frame rate. And with the rise in popularity of HFR, itās only becoming more common. Especially with animated movies.
48 fps is not ratified by ITU-R
Considering the ITU-R is for radio communication, thatās pretty irrelevant.
I do small fps changes without frame Interpolation, for example 23.976 to 24 I do video speed up without reencode (means muxing) and then audio speed-conversion (needs reencode). It would be nice if Topaz had integrated this.