Capt Fiero wrote:
My brain is not kicking into gear the way it should but, standard TV is 30 frames per second, IIRC. |
Yes and no. In North America (and Japan), NTSC video is 30fps. Most of the rest of the world uses PAL video which is 25fps.
Capt Fiero wrote:
15 FPS would be half of standard, and would seem to play at double speed is replayed at 30fps, but I don't think the FPS really matters in this aspect. |
Video recorded at 15fps will normally play back at 15fps. However, it has somewhat of a "strobe" effect because our brains notice the reduced frame rate (compared to 30fps NTSC or 25fps PAL or 24fps film).
In a video editing program, if 15fps video is added to a 30fps project, the program (unless instructed not to do) will duplicate each frame. The end result is that the 15fps video still looks the same way it was originally recorded when played back.
Capt Fiero wrote:
I am guessing and Patric correct me if I am wrong, the camera must shoot 15 frames, then pause then shoot 15 more frames then pause in order to get the affect that the video produced. |
Not necessarily. I believe the usual procedure is that with a one second interval, the camera/camcorder will shoot ONE frame of video (not a whole second of video), pause for a second, then shoot another single frame of video. However, it’s possible the default (or selectable) number of frames shot/recorded per second could be anywhere from one up to who knows what.
I’ll have to take a look at my Sony camcorders to see what the options are in regards to interval recording. I’ve never used this setting in twenty years of shooting video , but I can see from Austin’s video that there are definitely situations where it might be fun to try out.
Austin wrote:
If you want I can send you the original AVI file. |
Thanks Austin, but that won’t be necessary. We’ll figure this out without having to upload/download such a large file.