Adobe premiere pro sound not correct after elgato export

windraidergames

Active Member
So when I edit a file in Elgato Game Capture HD, and I export it to my desktop and then import it to premiere pro, the sound file is really messed up!

Premiere pro doesn't give a message saying 'corrupt sound file or sth' but it just puts it in the timeline and I have no idea how this happens but the sound goes faster then the video (but you can't here the sound go faster) when you are at the last 10-5 sec (depending the length of the vid) there is no sound anymore...

I'm going to try to explain it with a design thingy :p :

Normal video + Sound:
--------------------------- (video)
--------------------------- (sound) --> it matches up

After import in PP:
----------------------------(video)
-------------------- (sound) --> it doesn't match up!

Any solutions?
 
Yes, don't edit in the Elgato Software when you already have Premiere that's tonnes more powerful for editing anyways. 2) double check the frame rate of the video when it's imported into premiere, it should be at 30 fps or 59.94. If it's 59.93 or 59.95 the audio will be out of sync. Ironically premiere struggles with frame rates, they need to be specific.[DOUBLEPOST=1391859446,1391859381][/DOUBLEPOST]e.g. of what you should see in premiere upload_2014-2-8_22-37-12.png
 
Yes, don't edit in the Elgato Software when you already have Premiere that's tonnes more powerful for editing anyways. 2) double check the frame rate of the video when it's imported into premiere, it should be at 30 fps or 59.94. If it's 59.93 or 59.95 the audio will be out of sync. Ironically premiere struggles with frame rates, they need to be specific.[DOUBLEPOST=1391859446,1391859381][/DOUBLEPOST]e.g. of what you should see in premiere View attachment 16455
there is a reason why premiere does this instead of automatically doing it, just to get the best video quality out of your videos.
 
there is a reason why premiere does this instead of automatically doing it, just to get the best video quality out of your videos.
what do you mean? they do it to make the video itself look better as in disregarding audio? I think it's silly either way lol

But I forgot to mention to @windraidergames if the frame rates are whacky, use handbrake to set it to a constant frame rate. Also, if you're using Elgato, make sure you click pause to stop the "live" thing. I've found sometimes it can cause audio issues even in the original video.
 
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