When you record a video at 60 fps, how can you play the video back at 24 fps?
I saw a friend shooting video at 60 fps and then playing the videos back at 24 fps. Seeing the 60 fps video playback at 24 fps was quite amazing and impressive (dramatic almost slow motion effect)!
He did all of this on what looked like an expensive DLSR device.
My question is:
When you record a video at 60 fps, how can you play the video back at 24 fps?
I tried to edit the video on my pixel 2 but there wasn't anything there for changing the fps. Maybe I will try VLC player.
video media-player editing
add a comment |
I saw a friend shooting video at 60 fps and then playing the videos back at 24 fps. Seeing the 60 fps video playback at 24 fps was quite amazing and impressive (dramatic almost slow motion effect)!
He did all of this on what looked like an expensive DLSR device.
My question is:
When you record a video at 60 fps, how can you play the video back at 24 fps?
I tried to edit the video on my pixel 2 but there wasn't anything there for changing the fps. Maybe I will try VLC player.
video media-player editing
add a comment |
I saw a friend shooting video at 60 fps and then playing the videos back at 24 fps. Seeing the 60 fps video playback at 24 fps was quite amazing and impressive (dramatic almost slow motion effect)!
He did all of this on what looked like an expensive DLSR device.
My question is:
When you record a video at 60 fps, how can you play the video back at 24 fps?
I tried to edit the video on my pixel 2 but there wasn't anything there for changing the fps. Maybe I will try VLC player.
video media-player editing
I saw a friend shooting video at 60 fps and then playing the videos back at 24 fps. Seeing the 60 fps video playback at 24 fps was quite amazing and impressive (dramatic almost slow motion effect)!
He did all of this on what looked like an expensive DLSR device.
My question is:
When you record a video at 60 fps, how can you play the video back at 24 fps?
I tried to edit the video on my pixel 2 but there wasn't anything there for changing the fps. Maybe I will try VLC player.
video media-player editing
video media-player editing
asked Dec 26 at 3:02
Trevor Boyd Smith
2871615
2871615
add a comment |
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
Using VLC player:
- play the video
- tap the screen to bring up the controls
- click the three dots button
- click the"playback speed" button
- adjust to 45 - 50%
- done
It doesn't get you exactly the 24 fps but it's something!
I would love to have a way to export the video at 24fps. Or better video editing for built-in Android apps.
add a comment |
I personally use Cyberlink Power Director on Android for doing this, you need to slow it down to around %45 and then export the video at 24 FPS
Export Steps with Power Director
1 - Select Save Video
2 - Select Save to Device
3 - Select Options
4 - Select Frame rate
5 - Select 24FPS
6 - Optional Bit rate
7 - Save
8 - Export
Awesome screen capture
– Trevor Boyd Smith
Dec 27 at 21:29
add a comment |
Frames get dropped, carried over as required. In effect the 60FPS is "strobed" to 24FPS. This is a common topic for home cinema buffs as 24FPS is a standard.
You need to transcode, an android device is not the best for this.
Search for Video Transcoder
, maybe have a look at Timbre.
Most people would upload to a workstation for anything serious or large.
New contributor
1
Agreed, a workstation is ideal for large videos but Android device's seem to handle 30minute video exports at FullHD, and 4K fairly easily.
– Zillinium
Dec 27 at 2:11
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Using VLC player:
- play the video
- tap the screen to bring up the controls
- click the three dots button
- click the"playback speed" button
- adjust to 45 - 50%
- done
It doesn't get you exactly the 24 fps but it's something!
I would love to have a way to export the video at 24fps. Or better video editing for built-in Android apps.
add a comment |
Using VLC player:
- play the video
- tap the screen to bring up the controls
- click the three dots button
- click the"playback speed" button
- adjust to 45 - 50%
- done
It doesn't get you exactly the 24 fps but it's something!
I would love to have a way to export the video at 24fps. Or better video editing for built-in Android apps.
add a comment |
Using VLC player:
- play the video
- tap the screen to bring up the controls
- click the three dots button
- click the"playback speed" button
- adjust to 45 - 50%
- done
It doesn't get you exactly the 24 fps but it's something!
I would love to have a way to export the video at 24fps. Or better video editing for built-in Android apps.
Using VLC player:
- play the video
- tap the screen to bring up the controls
- click the three dots button
- click the"playback speed" button
- adjust to 45 - 50%
- done
It doesn't get you exactly the 24 fps but it's something!
I would love to have a way to export the video at 24fps. Or better video editing for built-in Android apps.
edited Dec 26 at 13:31
answered Dec 26 at 3:10
Trevor Boyd Smith
2871615
2871615
add a comment |
add a comment |
I personally use Cyberlink Power Director on Android for doing this, you need to slow it down to around %45 and then export the video at 24 FPS
Export Steps with Power Director
1 - Select Save Video
2 - Select Save to Device
3 - Select Options
4 - Select Frame rate
5 - Select 24FPS
6 - Optional Bit rate
7 - Save
8 - Export
Awesome screen capture
– Trevor Boyd Smith
Dec 27 at 21:29
add a comment |
I personally use Cyberlink Power Director on Android for doing this, you need to slow it down to around %45 and then export the video at 24 FPS
Export Steps with Power Director
1 - Select Save Video
2 - Select Save to Device
3 - Select Options
4 - Select Frame rate
5 - Select 24FPS
6 - Optional Bit rate
7 - Save
8 - Export
Awesome screen capture
– Trevor Boyd Smith
Dec 27 at 21:29
add a comment |
I personally use Cyberlink Power Director on Android for doing this, you need to slow it down to around %45 and then export the video at 24 FPS
Export Steps with Power Director
1 - Select Save Video
2 - Select Save to Device
3 - Select Options
4 - Select Frame rate
5 - Select 24FPS
6 - Optional Bit rate
7 - Save
8 - Export
I personally use Cyberlink Power Director on Android for doing this, you need to slow it down to around %45 and then export the video at 24 FPS
Export Steps with Power Director
1 - Select Save Video
2 - Select Save to Device
3 - Select Options
4 - Select Frame rate
5 - Select 24FPS
6 - Optional Bit rate
7 - Save
8 - Export
edited Dec 26 at 13:50
answered Dec 26 at 12:20
Zillinium
85729
85729
Awesome screen capture
– Trevor Boyd Smith
Dec 27 at 21:29
add a comment |
Awesome screen capture
– Trevor Boyd Smith
Dec 27 at 21:29
Awesome screen capture
– Trevor Boyd Smith
Dec 27 at 21:29
Awesome screen capture
– Trevor Boyd Smith
Dec 27 at 21:29
add a comment |
Frames get dropped, carried over as required. In effect the 60FPS is "strobed" to 24FPS. This is a common topic for home cinema buffs as 24FPS is a standard.
You need to transcode, an android device is not the best for this.
Search for Video Transcoder
, maybe have a look at Timbre.
Most people would upload to a workstation for anything serious or large.
New contributor
1
Agreed, a workstation is ideal for large videos but Android device's seem to handle 30minute video exports at FullHD, and 4K fairly easily.
– Zillinium
Dec 27 at 2:11
add a comment |
Frames get dropped, carried over as required. In effect the 60FPS is "strobed" to 24FPS. This is a common topic for home cinema buffs as 24FPS is a standard.
You need to transcode, an android device is not the best for this.
Search for Video Transcoder
, maybe have a look at Timbre.
Most people would upload to a workstation for anything serious or large.
New contributor
1
Agreed, a workstation is ideal for large videos but Android device's seem to handle 30minute video exports at FullHD, and 4K fairly easily.
– Zillinium
Dec 27 at 2:11
add a comment |
Frames get dropped, carried over as required. In effect the 60FPS is "strobed" to 24FPS. This is a common topic for home cinema buffs as 24FPS is a standard.
You need to transcode, an android device is not the best for this.
Search for Video Transcoder
, maybe have a look at Timbre.
Most people would upload to a workstation for anything serious or large.
New contributor
Frames get dropped, carried over as required. In effect the 60FPS is "strobed" to 24FPS. This is a common topic for home cinema buffs as 24FPS is a standard.
You need to transcode, an android device is not the best for this.
Search for Video Transcoder
, maybe have a look at Timbre.
Most people would upload to a workstation for anything serious or large.
New contributor
edited 2 days ago
Reddy Lutonadio
535218
535218
New contributor
answered Dec 26 at 19:53
mckenzm
1111
1111
New contributor
New contributor
1
Agreed, a workstation is ideal for large videos but Android device's seem to handle 30minute video exports at FullHD, and 4K fairly easily.
– Zillinium
Dec 27 at 2:11
add a comment |
1
Agreed, a workstation is ideal for large videos but Android device's seem to handle 30minute video exports at FullHD, and 4K fairly easily.
– Zillinium
Dec 27 at 2:11
1
1
Agreed, a workstation is ideal for large videos but Android device's seem to handle 30minute video exports at FullHD, and 4K fairly easily.
– Zillinium
Dec 27 at 2:11
Agreed, a workstation is ideal for large videos but Android device's seem to handle 30minute video exports at FullHD, and 4K fairly easily.
– Zillinium
Dec 27 at 2:11
add a comment |
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