I find it perfect that (at least as far as i've watched parts of this video) millisecond's 2nd & 3rd digits always end with either 00, 16, 33, 50, 66, and/or 83, that is one good simple way to keep it consistent.
Yea, the millisecond decimals would have been a bit much to add, just rounded them numbers that would be easier to copy and paste. This was made from a 30fps millisecond timer I found on here, cutting and pasting in numbers on the in between frames, then copying blocks of a full second, then 10 seconds, then minutes, and so on
Shit, I never thought about it but you're right, it almost bothers me enough to change it and make them actually perfect but I don't want to lose the views and watch hours lol
@@W1nkey_ ah, I thought you meant there was a mistake in the displayed times, I meticulously checked every frame up to a minute then copied the blocks after that and just checked the beginning and end of every minute change. It's as accurate as it's going to get on TH-cam because of the 60fps framerate limit, I guess I could've added the proper millisecond decimals but every frame's milliseconds are rounded to the lower nearest 1/60th of a second, basically just 16.6666 millisecond increments with the decimals cut off. If it would help, the video editor program I use can make a 100fps or 120fps timer, and I could upload it to Google drive as a downloadable file that can be viewed in windows media player, VLC, or mpc-hc, but that's still just 10 or 8.3333 millisecond increments. Only way to get anything faster and documentable is with a crazy expensive slowmo camera. I think there are some actual 1 millisecond physical clock timers for stuff like Rubik's cube speedrunning but they need a button to be tapped to stop it. What are you needing such a precise timer for?
@CynicalCreator I make videos on drag racing, and in drag racing even 0.1 seconds can determine a win or loss so I was searching for one that's accurate. Thanks for replying
It was made for speedrunning overlays, 60 frames in a second of 60fps video, 1/60th of a second is ~16.6 milliseconds, every frame's millisecond display is rounded down, without millisecond decimals it's as accurate as it's going to get on youtube
I find it perfect that (at least as far as i've watched parts of this video) millisecond's 2nd & 3rd digits always end with either 00, 16, 33, 50, 66, and/or 83, that is one good simple way to keep it consistent.
Yea, the millisecond decimals would have been a bit much to add, just rounded them numbers that would be easier to copy and paste. This was made from a 30fps millisecond timer I found on here, cutting and pasting in numbers on the in between frames, then copying blocks of a full second, then 10 seconds, then minutes, and so on
@@CynicalCreator I see.
30:00 half video done
Good for testing Moonlight/GameStream streaming latency
I was just thinking that how fast milliseconds looks like and then I found this video.soo fast .
16:36.466
Township Line Road Station Is Near Philadelphia Pennsylvania On US Route 01
Baltimore Pike Ends At Baltimore Avenue In Philadelphia
You Can Begin Watching Septa Trolley Route 34 Going Down Baltimore Avenue
Baltimore Pike Begins At Baltimore Avenue In Philadelphia
33:12:766 the best part fr fr
My Baltimore Avenue Bike Begins At 61st Street
the ":" should be "." for millisecond.
Shit, I never thought about it but you're right, it almost bothers me enough to change it and make them actually perfect but I don't want to lose the views and watch hours lol
Just make a “[NEW] (video name)” and put it in the description of this.
Starts instantly
1:39
Not accurate :(
What's not accurate about it?
@@CynicalCreator0.34 too slow, I need one that's exact
@@W1nkey_ ah, I thought you meant there was a mistake in the displayed times, I meticulously checked every frame up to a minute then copied the blocks after that and just checked the beginning and end of every minute change. It's as accurate as it's going to get on TH-cam because of the 60fps framerate limit, I guess I could've added the proper millisecond decimals but every frame's milliseconds are rounded to the lower nearest 1/60th of a second, basically just 16.6666 millisecond increments with the decimals cut off. If it would help, the video editor program I use can make a 100fps or 120fps timer, and I could upload it to Google drive as a downloadable file that can be viewed in windows media player, VLC, or mpc-hc, but that's still just 10 or 8.3333 millisecond increments. Only way to get anything faster and documentable is with a crazy expensive slowmo camera. I think there are some actual 1 millisecond physical clock timers for stuff like Rubik's cube speedrunning but they need a button to be tapped to stop it. What are you needing such a precise timer for?
@CynicalCreator I make videos on drag racing, and in drag racing even 0.1 seconds can determine a win or loss so I was searching for one that's accurate. Thanks for replying
My Baltimore Avenue Bike Ends At 61st Street
4:41 1000 milliseconds in a second bro just like bro and set a timer for reasons
It was made for speedrunning overlays, 60 frames in a second of 60fps video, 1/60th of a second is ~16.6 milliseconds, every frame's millisecond display is rounded down, without millisecond decimals it's as accurate as it's going to get on youtube
im still trying to find a perfect timer with all the millseconds
you cant. it would be necessary a 1000 fps video.
the only way to do that now is with an expensive slow motion camera
Baltimore Pike Connects Baltimore Maryland With Philadelphia Pennsylvania
what's the font my comrade ?)
new sub btw
Not sure what the font is, I just found a 5 minute 30fps timer on here and edited it by cutting and moving the numbers in videoproc
Can some please help me with the name of font used here.
US 1 Can Continue On Township Line Road
Baltimore Avenue Can Carry Septa Trolley Route 34
US 1 Can Continue On West Baltimore Pike
At the end should be 60:00:000
00:00
1:00:00
Congratulations, you got the high score!
US 1 Heads Toward Township Line Road Station
0:00
Looks Just Like Septa
what?
US 1 Can Bypass All The Septa Routes
not me using a code hack
Baltimore Pike Bypasses Media
5:55:23:88
A link to another timer? Or is there a mistake in mine?
0:07 I got 08:000
0:03 I GOT 3:333 !,!,!, !,!!😳 😮😮😮😮😮😮😮 I 😮🎉😮🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉 I SWAER TO GOD
dang, now i gotta come up with prizes lol