SwissMotard
The Swiss Motard
You can edit at any resolution and frame rate you want if you use a decent editor and video proxies.
This does not affect you final rendered settings.
This does not affect you final rendered settings.
I did some tests with my gopro around file sizes with 1080/60 and 720/60 and surprisingly the file size is the same. Found out that the go pro will aggressively compress more when set to 1080/60 which is why the file size stays the same overall. Does not affect the camera or image quality but it does demand a lot more from your editing PC and it has to un compress a lot faster to keep a smooth video playing. Just a heads up as I had to upgrade my laptop so I could continue at 1080/60 editing.....Sure thing, I just noticed my camera can also record at 1080/60 so I think I'll also do some tests at that resolution. I'll put up an unlisted test like you said, maybe it can help some other people as well.
Sorry, I was being a twat... just doubled checked and the there is a difference. I was looking at the file sizes created which where always 3.66gig, however now I have looked again I can see that the 1080/60 is 17 mins long, whilst the 720/60 is actually 26 mins long....That's seriously strange!
I'm looking at 2 files right now from my Hero 3+ Black and the 108p60 is almost twice as large as the 1080p30!
This does of course mean that the in terms of time you do not get double the amount within the same file size... and to get more time into the same file size then the compression ratio has increased.... by my reasoning anywaySorry, I was being a twat... just doubled checked and the there is a difference. I was looking at the file sizes created which where always 3.66gig, however now I have looked again I can see that the 1080/60 is 17 mins long, whilst the 720/60 is actually 26 mins long....