PE12 - Rendering for Youtube 1920x1080p, 60 FPS

Hey guys,
I was just wondering, since Youtube now implemented the 60 FPS feature, how I could render my videos with Adobe Premiere Elements 12, so that the outputfile has the following speccs:
1920 x 1080p
60 FPS
Youtube-compatible file format, so:
MPEG4
AVI
WMV
MPEGPS
FLV
I have fine settings for working with 30 FPS or lower, but I can't seem to get them to 60 FPS with PE12 - at least not with usable results that don't need to render for 4 hours straight, or take about 5 Gigs of Space per 15 minute file...

concreteduck
There are no presets for 1080p60 upload to YouTube using the Premiere Elements 12 Publish+Share/Social Websites/YouTube feature.
But, you can export your 1080p60 Timeline content to a  1080p60 file saved to the computer hard drive, and, from there, upload the file to YouTube at the
You Tube web site. There you can get any extended time if needed by applying for one of YouTube extended time accounts which can be used there but
not within the Premiere Elements upload to YouTube feature.
To create your 1080p60...for now I will assume that you need 1920 x 1080 @ 59.94 progressive frames per second....if you need 60 instead,
then just set for 60 instead of 59.94 in the Export Settings dialog.
Publish+Share
Computer
AVCHD
with Presets = MP4 - H.264 1920 x 1080p30, and, under the Advanced Button/Video Tab of that preset you are going
to customized your export settings for 1080p60 (1920 x 1080 @ 59.94 progressive frames per second.
Check the estimated file size before you hit the Save button.
The Export Settings customized should look like
(any problems setting the Frame Width or Frame Height - click on the box to the right of those entries to remove any
chain link that may be there. My screenshot shows the chain link.....also, any problems in this matter, set the Level and
Profile, and then enter Frame Width and Frame Height.)
If your Estimated File Size is larger than wanted, then experiment with lowering the Target Bitrate and Maximum Bitrate
to try to arrive at a compromise between bitrate, file size, and end product quality.
Please review and consider, and then let us know if that worked for you.
Thank you.
ATR

Similar Messages

  • I just bought the new 2014 Mac Mini 2.6 8Gig for $699 at the Apple Store Online. I want to use it for light editing in iMovie making video's for YouTube, I couldn't afford the higher priced models. Is this going to work for me? I hope so..

    Will this do basic video editing for YouTube Video's in iMovie, I hope so.  It's all I could afford.
    Just under $800 with tax and Applecare.
    It's stock 2.6 8gigs 1 terabyte hard drive.
    I have two monitors DVI that I plan to hook to it.
    I know it's weak but will it get me going without too much hardship.
    I want to grow into the more high priced computers and Final Cut Pro later on.
    I know I will need a bigger computer then.
    Thanks

    There are many people using the basic (i5) 2012 MacMini and even older ones to edit complex films in FCP X so you should have no problems.
    I have been using FCP 7 and FCP X since they came out on my 2008 iMac Core 2 Duo and am thinking of getting the same model as you rather than pay the astronomic price for a new 27" iMac.
    The performance won't be quite as fast but it will be at least 4 times faster at rendering than my old iMac.

  • How to export in exact same quality file when uploding for youtube?

    Hello
    Im writing here cause im really tired of exporting dozens of files with bad quality even though im using best exporting settings.
    I tried to watch tutorial clips where people show how to make best quality but still i cant get it right.....i really dont understand where im doing wrong!!
    I would appreciate if there is some1 out there who could help me export in corrects settings.....i know its not easy to help some1 with settings by writing here as u have to know which settings i shot with which settings im using in my timeline and what im using for export....and so on.
    but i give it a try...
    So its like this ive got a camera named
    Sony HDR CX730E
    and i made my shot with setting (pic1)
    its written in swedish anyways its avchd 1920x1080 50p
    so i created a project setting as (pic 2)
    and sequence settings as (pic3)
    and when i export i have tried to export in dozens of files to see which one seems to be best like H.264 ,HD 1080p 29.97 or youtube HD 1080p 29.97 and even i tried Mxf op1a avc intra class100 1080p 25p which gives a superb HD quality when i play it in computer but the files is almost 3,5gb large but i think the larger the file is the better quality i get!?
    Anyhow when i upload the mxf file or any other file which i have exported for youtube it gives a very poor quality once u put Full HD 1080 in full screen ....its almost like u play it without HD......
    I want to achieve something like this http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=avCWzkNiXok
    and my video quality is like youtube video i just showed but unfortunately only in my computer not in youtube.......
    So if there is some1 out there who cud help me ill be so greatful of u!
    Thank you
    (im using adobe premiere pro cc)

    OK.
    First of all, I would not try to export 50fps to 29.97 fps.  I would use 25fps if I used anything other than 50fps.
    Second, there is no need to change your settings at all. YouTube says to upload at the same frame rate you shot it at.
    https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/1722171?hl=en&ref_topic=2888648
    You will also notice that 8Mb/s is the "standard" quality and you can go up to 50Mb/s for 1080p. So try exporting at around the same bitrate as your original recording. If it was 25Mb/s then try that. If 50Mb/s go ahead and try that if you are still not happy at 25Mb/s.
    Although, I generally find that I am content at about 15Mb/s for video without much action, 25Mb/s for most video and for sports I use the max of 50Mb/s.
    Having said that, I don't worry about file size anymore. I have disk space and a fast Internet connection. If either of those are a problem for you, then you may have to adjust your expectations.

  • Best settings for YouTube video?

    I've just finished editing my first video in iMovie and would like to export it to upload to YouTube. The YouTube site asks for MPEG4 at 320x240 pixels, 30fps, with MP3 audio. But what about all the other settings in the advanced export settings? Does anyone know what they should be for best results?
    Thanks in advance.

    This, from Karsten Schlülter (YouTuber):
    I recommend in the expert settings:
    mpeg4 as comprossor
    in the options:
    320x240 (youtube's "native" res)
    30 fps (for fast action), 15 fps (to generate smaller files for longer movies)
    the bitrate slider...- 500kB/sec is an excellent quality for such res (and generates laaarge files), but the conversion at youtube adds a lot of artfifacts...
    :)Sue

  • Best PE7.0 export settings for Youtube HD, Vimeo or Smugmug?

    Hi all,
    I'm really new to video editing and I can't find any recommendations on the best Premiere Elements 7 export settings for Youtube HD, Vimeo or Smugmug. It seems like most of them want you to upload in 1280x720.
    My original source is 1920x1080 30p AVCHD from a Canon HF100. Obviously, I would like to keep it at the same frame rate. There doesn't appear to be a preset in PE7 (or a way at all) to output 1280x720 30 into an MPEG container with H.264 encoding. When I go into the advanced properties of a preset like "H.264 1920x1080i 30" or "MPEG2 1920x1080i 30" and choose 1280x720, I no longer have an option for 29.97 fps - the only options are 23.976 or 24 fps. It seems bad to change this, right?
    I see the preset for "HD 720p 30" which appears to be MPEG encoding of the video stream instead of H.264. This seemed to work OK, but I wasn't sure about it, because when I choose it I see in the description a line that says TV Standard: NTSC. A number of web sites indicate that H.264 is preferred, but I don't really understand why.
    I also found a way to do H.264 in a Quicktime container. This seemed a little suboptimal because you can't do variable bitrate. When I unselected the "select bitrate" checkbox, it seemed like a quality of 50 yielded a .mov file with a bit rate of 2.87Mb/s, and a quality of 100 yielded a .mov file with a bit rate of 26Mb/s. It is confusing to me how the quality setting affects the bitrate on the quicktime containers.
    I'm leaning towards using the "HD 720p 30" preset and working with the bit rate choices, but am open to comments. What do others think?
    And on a related question - assuming we choose the "HD 720p 30" preset as a starting point, given the 1GB file restriction at Youtube, it seems to make sense to choose a bitrate that allows both good quality and reasonable file size. I don't know much about whether VBR 1 pass, 2 pass or CBR would be best for this kind of online HD video. Google is a little unhelpful here: http://www.google.com/support/youtube/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=132461
    This page (http://webvideotechniques.com/123/bigger-and-better-encoding-for-youtube-hd) seems to indicate aiming for a bitrate of 8Mbps with a minimum of 4Mbps, including 2 pass VBR.
    So, basically, I'm confused and a little overwhelmed. I think I have solutions that work, but it's hard to tell. What does the greater community think? Thanks.

    Thanks very much E Mann, that was a very helpful thread. I think it actually would apply for youtube as well. For other users, here's a direct link to the settings for Premiere Elements:
    http://eugenia.gnomefiles.org/2007/12/08/exporting-with-adobe-premiere-in-720p/
    Roughly, the answer is:
    Quicktime container
    Video codec: H.264
    Quality: 80 (I used 100 and it just takes longer to encode)
    Frame Rate: 29.97 (I guess if you are shooting in 24p, this might be different)
    Bitrate: 5000 (I might try 8000)
    Audio codec: AAC
    Output channels: Stereo
    Frequency: 48kHz
    Now, my own personal changes to this recipe are:
    Quality: 100 - takes longer to encode, no file size difference
    Bitrate: 8000
    Frequency: 44kHz (recommended by youtube)
    One final note is that for Vimeo it appears you may have to try encoding in 29.97 or 23.97 and test to see which you like better. Apparently Vimeo caps fps at 24.
    The nice thing about this is that you can get a quality video directly out of Premiere Elements and you don't have to pipe it through another program.

  • Will Firefox support Youtube in 60 fps anytime soon?

    Will Firefox support watching HD-videos on Youtube in 60 fps in the near future?

    I get 720p60 and 1080p60 offered in the current Nightly build that has MSE enabled by default.
    *media.mediasource.enabled = true
    *http://www.youtube.com/html5
    Otherwise Google offers the 60fps choice via 720p60 and 1080p60 only to Google Chrome.
    *https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLbsGxdAPhjv9UrLo19pS8teoRKj7funAy
    It doesn't work smoothly though and there are frames not painted for me on Linux.

  • Creating video for YouTube - which user settings?

    I've seen a lot of posts about converting video for posting on YouTube but I can't find any information on the best sequence setting to CREATE video for posting on YouTube. I'm making a 30-45 second promotional video that will be entirely made up of stills/text and music, so I'm just going to be doing moves on jpegs. YouTube videos are now displayed 640.360, but I can't find a FCP sequence preset that will allow me to create a video at that size. Am I missing something? Should I just create it at some other widescreen setting then convert it down? Trying to keep this is simple as possible -- do not want to have to render every clip in the timeline.
    thanks,
    p

    Am I missing something?
    Make your original video in one of the codecs supported by Final Cut Pro. You will find a list of possible codecs in the Easy Setup menu.
    do not want to have to render every clip in the timeline...
    Your source material is JPEG images. While they can be imported, they don't use a codec of their own. They will have to be rendered.
    YouTube tutorials:
    http://www.kenstone.net/fcphomepage/you_tube_reduxgary.html
    http://www.kenstone.net/fcphomepage/youtube_compressorgary.html
    http://www.kenstone.net/fcphomepage/you_tube_hdgary.html

  • Fast Low-Res Renders for Clients

    Hey guys, recently I had a project that I needed to render out quickly for the client (anyone else always seem to have tight deadlines, haha), I haven't played around much with render settings before but I found it so helpful to know on a tight deadline that I decided to create a short video to share what I learnt... After Effects #1 - Fast Renders for Clients - YouTube Using Save RAM preview (set to 'third' resolution) saved me tons of time! I'm always interested to know and learn what workflow others use in this situation though, let me know if you have any other tips.

    Try here
    https://discussions.apple.com/community/professional_applications/final_cut_stud io

  • Exporting For YouTube - Premiere Pro CS5 (Canon XL2)

    I shot a promo video with my Canon XL2, and would like to upload the finished product to YouTube at the highest possible quality in order to help promote the company I work for.
    Footage shot in 30p at 29.97 fps, 16:9 - NTSC.
    Sequence settings are all correct and match my footage perfectly.
    I have exported the video as H.264, AVI, MOV, MP4, MP2, WMV and countless other formats. When played on my computer the video quality is SUPERB. I am ecstatic at how it turned out, HOWEVER, when I upload the video -in any format- to YouTube, it looks absolutely horrible - as though it were shot with a webcam.
    Does anyone have any advice as to what I might be doing wrong? Anyone had any experience with the XL-2 and Premiere Pro videos being ugly when uploaded to YouTube?
    Thanks a bunch!

    Be very careful when using Adobe's presents for YouTube, Vimeo, etc.  They have a fixed frame rate but it doesn't always match your source frame rate and this adds additional render time and can drop or add (adding is much worse) frames.
    The worst offender is a preset that is for non drop-frame 30.0 fps (instead of drop frame 29.97) because every 3 seconds 3 frames get added.
    Also be aware that when exporting for the web (or most anything other than to DVD), you want to use square pixels.
    This might require a bit of tweaking with the presets but it is well worth the effort.
    864x480 is the square pixel equivalent to 720x480 widescreen (1.21...).
    For more indepth info on the presets (and my rants on the matter) - have a look at my CS5 and C5.5 articles.
    http://www.eventdv.net/Articles/News/Feature/Benchmarking-Adobe-Premiere-Pro-CS5-70277.htm
    (under the heading "Don't trust the presets")
    http://www.eventdv.net/Articles/ReadArticle.aspx?ArticleID=74852
    (under the heading "Working with watch folders in Adobe Media Encoder CS5.5")

  • Render issues for Youtube

    I am trying to render a project for youtube. I have uploaded screenshots of my render settings, which were recommended by other users as I am using the trial and dont know if I want to pay for this program. (The Advanced Settings for Audio has bitrate checked) It rendered with a mp4 ending but youtube says it isnt recognized. Is this normal or is something wrong with my settings?

    Use the preset it already has for YouTube, not a custom one. You will see it if you scroll down the box, pick out for example YouTube HD 1080p. If you're in 720P then pick that one.
    Another thing would be to try to not get an .mp4. Select quicktime on export.

  • Proper workflow for youtube?

    I'm new to FCP X, and video editing in general.
    I created some nice videos, recorded in 1080i, and when the sequence is finished in fcpx, I have been using the following workflow:
    1. Render the whole thing first (as I keep background rendering off while I work)
    2. Use the "Export using Compressor Settings" in the Share menu
    3. Choose the "Video Sharing, 720p" setting
    4. Save it to my desktop
    5. After hours of waiting...
    6. I login to my YouTube account
    7. Add the video, and then wait.
    The problem I'm having, is the incredibly long youtube wait to upload.  The file I'm using came out of FCPX/Compressor at about 750MB. It's 9 minutes long or so.
    I've literally been trying for 7 hours straight to get this stupid video to finish going to youtube. It goes, stalls at, say 56%. I quit, try again later, and maybe it gets to 86%. 7 hours? It's taking me longer to get the video out for viewing by the client, then the entire time I spent shooting and editing it. Awful workflow this way.
    So, I'm looking for some real-world workflow on youtube.
    Should I be trying to upload a 750 MB file in the first place?
    If not, how would I export it down, and keep the quality at 720p?
    Am I missing steps here?

    Well, the video processed, and it's now in the wrong ration, it's 4:3 as in SD.
    So, quickly, which File Format would I use? I get a whole list. I just chose QuickTime movie before, and got the SD ratio.
    MPEG-4? H.264 for Apple Devices?
    Then I need to choose Video Compression, there are several H.264 options there as well.
    I do see the bitrate slider, and can easily enter 5,000 for that.
    Just a few tips would ge appreciated.
    Anything I can do to streamline the creation of the proper file for youtube upload would be great.

  • What is the best scrubbing rate for youtube?

    what is the best scrubbing rate for youtube?

    Ummm... can you elaborate? why do you think a 1-pass would be better? Before i go through another 5 - 6 hours of compression, I would like to understand a little bit better... 2 0r 3 word answers aren't going to help me at all. Sorry.
    Lisa <
    You have about three thousand pages of manuals, why do you think we can shrink that information down? Compression is really difficult to understand and to control. There are dozens of Web sites you can explore or you could look at amazon.com and buy yourself some training systems. If you are going to be doing a lot of compression and encoding, you will learn it the same way everyone else does, slowly. It's often easier and faster and therefore cheaper to pay a service to do your encoding. Spend a few hours reading the Compressor forum.
    Consider that you don't need to waste mjuch time rendering entire projects. Just assemble a short collection of problem scenes and use different settings till you get something you like. To confuse things even further, encoding results are totally subjective and a terrible compromise. You give up image quality to save time encoding or to gain program length. Youinvest tons of set up and encoding time to gain control the image quality. And you must process the audio separately to get the best use of your delivery media's capacity.
    bogiesan

  • Panasonic HDC-HS20 - Settings for YouTube

    Hi! I have Final Cut Express, version 401B2. My computer is an iMac 3.06 GHz Intel Core Duo. Today I bought a Panasonic HDC-HS20 video camera. But I'm confused. What settings should I have in "easy setup" and when I export the video? The goal is to of course have the best quality possible. All videos I make are for YouTube.
    So my questions are:
    1. What settings should I have in "easy set up"? What format, rate and use?
    2. What settings should I use when I export the video? What codec etc?

    Yes I have PAL. First I need to choose the format.I can choose PAL, NTSC, HD, Apple Intermediate Codec and Panasonic DV/DVC PRO. I can also choose "all rates". But I'm guessing I should choose HD as the format.
    If I choose 25 fps I can choose : AVCHD APPLE INTERMEDIATE CODEC 1920x1080i50.
    If I choose 29,97 I can chose: AVCHD APPLE INTERMEDIATE CODEC 1920x1080i60
    There are some more options under USE but it's either one of these two. the camera has the AVCHD technology and I think it is AVCHD APPLE INTERMEDIATE CODEC 1920x1080i50, not i60. I can also choose "all rates" which lets me choose any of the options.
    I have in the camera chosen something called HA1920 which is the maxium picture quailty. So I'll try AVCHD APPLE INTERMEDIATE CODEC 1920x1080i50 as you said
    Format: HD
    RATE:25 fps
    USE: AVCHD APPLE INTERMEDIATE CODEC 1920x1080i50
    I'll try this and get back to you
    Thanks for the help! I really do appreciate it very much!

  • Discovery?? Testing for Youtube HD encoding

    +(I originally posted this in the Final Cut Pro forum, but didn't receive an answer and didn't know how to move it, so I'm re-posting here. Sorry for the double-post, I probably should have put it here in the first place.)+
    Maybe I'm stating something obvious (or missing something), but the last few days I must have been through 50+ threads in the Apple forums and others for tips and trick on encoding for website delivery from my websites and for YouTube. I didn't find anyone say exactly this... but, the de-interlacing seems to come out much better when I re-size the media vs. encoding it to the same dimensions.
    I exported from FCP as a QuickTime Movie, Self-Contained and took it into Compressor. I set the Frame Controls to all the best settings, but for the first couple of tests, I left the dimensions at 1920 x 1080 and no matter what I did, there was still some interlacing. In a couple of tutorials and posts, I saw recommendations of uploading to YouTube as 1280 x 720. I tried this, if you nothing else, to save file size. When I tried compressing again with this dimension, I could not find any trace of interlacing. Also, when I ran tests at 640 x 360 for my own website delivery, it also came out clean without interlacing.
    Does this make sense?
    *Other Questions:*
    1. For smaller file size for my websites, should I take the Frame Rate down to 24 or leave it at 30?
    2. How about the key frames, where is a good place to set this for decent quality and smaller files? I currently have the key frames set to 24.
    3. Whether I compress using QuickTime Conversion or Compressor, if I set the Data Rate to restrict the size, the Data Rate always ends up being higher when I view in QuickTime (like 600k to 779k). Is there a reason for this?
    Thanks,
    Dave

    David,
    I have never seen this when setting Frame Controls: On, Output Fields: Progressive and Deinterlace: Better. Can you confirm you used those custom settings?
    Yes, that is what I did (I also have the "Resize" Filter at Best (started with Better). With the de-interlace setting set to "Better" it still came out with interlacing, so I switched it to "Best" which didn't really improve it at 1920x1080.
    Changing image size likely is "forcing" a kind of deinterlace since you are reducing the total scan lines.
    This appears to be the way it is working for me on my system. I also had problems a couple of years back when I was outputting .flv files and had interlacing artifacts. I had to go out and buy the On2 Flix Exporter as QuickTime conversion was doing a poor job.
    YouTube now accepts full 1920x1080 resolution. You should retain your native resolution.
    I did originally run tests at the default resolution of 1920x1080, but as I said, no matter what settings I used, it came out with interlacing. It wasn't until I accepted the interlacing, and downsized the file to at least save bandwidth that I noticed it also got rid of the interlacing.
    Changing frame rate from 30 to 24 will have NO effect on file size, it will only make your video choppy unless it was shot at 24 and you are now accurately removing the pull-down frames.
    I guess I knew that, and maybe it's moot in this day and age, but doesn't 30 FPS vs. 24 FPS put a greater strain on the user's CPU? I've seen a few people recommend using 24 FPS for this reason. Again, maybe in 2010 this is not so much an issue anymore. A number of Compressor tutorials and settings suggestions are date 2007-2008. It's hard to find current info on export settings.
    Your final file size is determined ONLY by the data rate (bits per second)
    Makes sense.
    Keyframes- I typically set to Automatic.
    Seems reasonable, but why do so many tutorials recommend setting this to either 24 or 150? Is this again info from a few years back that is less relevant today?
    Stated data rate in QuickTime: Are you accounting for the audio data rate? When compressing a file you set the video and audio data rates separately, when played back in QuickTime they are summed together.
    You are correct. I spaced on the audio being added in ("Duh, gee George, can we keep the rabbit?")
    I appreciate your time.
    Thanks,
    Dave

  • I need help with exporting 720p video for youtube.

    Hi everyone, I have been using Adobe premeir for almost a year now and I love it, as its very professional and powerful. I used to edit Standard with no problem, then export the full unconverted file (wmv) and run it though Windows Movie Maker to compress it (haha yeah I know its crazy.) Now that I got a camera capable of shooting HDV I want to use it. Im just wondering the following:
    1.What format should I export with in Adobe Media Encoder? (Original Raw footage files from Camera are MOV formatted)
    2.What should I set the Bitrate to?
    3.How do I export to flash without it being to large of a file (Under 200mb's for a 5 minute video) and have it not choppy or pixelated?
    4.How do I speed up exporting, how many passes should I do?
    5.What overall is the best setup for youtube?
    I also noticed a small glitch, and its when I export normally (full size, no compression) and run it though a compressor it cuts out all of the titles, and just flashes them for a milisecond. Its really odd. It only happens when I export in a certain format in which I cannot quite remember. Anyways.. thanks in advance for helping me. Its very appreciated.
    NineLivesProductions

    perform a search using the term export for web and it should throw up some ideas.
    here's one for starters:
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=2309121&#2309121
    If you're using flip4mac to convert to wmv, the trial stops at 30 seconds - you need at least wmvstudio to export to wmv:
    http://www.flip4mac.com/wmv.htm

Maybe you are looking for