As a retired Licensed Broadcast Engineer, I agree with everything that Philip said except for one statement. If the camera I shoot with can only do 30 frames per second as it's top speed, of course, that what I will use., never 24 frames per second except if I am looking to replicate the low end quality of film. If you can with your camera, use 60 frames per second do so for better looking video. It's also easier to edit. That is, your edit point is twice as large and may make the difference between good edits and poor edits. Granted, the volume of the file will be twice as much as with 30 frames. If I can, I use 128 sized cards if the camera can handle it. Just set your editor to have 60 frames per second as the normal video rate and the video will not run fast. Leaving your video editor at 30 frames per second will have the video running twice as fast. Again, other than for a special effect, don't shoot 24 frames per second. This speed was picked for film because of the audio. Silent film was usually shot at 16 frames per second, a rate that made audio quality poor. That's why the old silent films ran fast because most projectors that ran sound could only run at 24 frames per second. At 24 frames per second your video will look "mushy' and have the appearance of being out of focus. For me, I never liked 24 frames per second that movies used. As a kid I didn't know why, I just didn't like it. Also, I never liked the "motion blur" caused by 24 frames. Movies shooting video will add this motion blur to satisfy those who think it's good. I'm sure these are the same people who think you can hear an explosion in outer space. But, it's your video, do what you want because you are the director of your shoot, unless you are not. Be safe. Good video.
Thanks bud! I recently actually switched to 30FPS. I don't like the look of it or 60FPS, but its what social media is wanting for IG and TikTok so I made the switch. I still shoot 24p for TH-cam. This video was shot in 24p as well.
That that’s exactly what I do. I use the 128V 60 one thing I would add is don’t buy brands of cards. You’ve never heard of. I bought some no-name cards that were on sale on Amazon and I had one fail. I have never had that issue withLexar Kingston, Samsung, and other major cards.
Hey Philip! What tripod do you recommend today? Could you list some few products (cheaper and more expensive ones)? I'm looking for one for few days now with your recommended features in mind (instant central column, flip locks etc.), but it's not easy. I'm looking for REALLY stable tripod, which is also not lower than 165 cm. Unfortunately majority of those fancy travel tripods are lower than 165 cm. Thanks for any help.
I make automotive videos and I just bought a new gopro hero 13 camera. I buy a normal scandisk ultra card and my camera tell me its too slow. I need a v30 or more card. I wish gopro had told me this before I bought a card.
Is the SanDisk 256GB 200MB SD UHS-I V30 memory card suitable for shooting raw and 4K video? What is the time available for me when shooting raw video? Will there be any restrictions when using it to shoot video at high frames?
Since most crop-sensor cameras, as far as I know, can only shoot at a maximum of 4K 120p, why do people keep buying and recommending V90 SD cards? Is there a reason beyond just video storage, such as how many burst shots you can take without hitting the camera’s buffer?
Resolution and frame rates are not the only things that can affect the video file size. Codec is another thing to consider. A crop sensor camera like the Sony ZVE10-II can shoot in a XAVC S-I codec, which can shoot up to 600M, which is 75MB/s. So you would need a v90 card. I wouldn't recommend shooting in XAVC S-I unless you were doing some greenscreen stuff anyway, so a v60 should be good to go if you shoot XAVC-S.
My action camera cuts the files up to 3GB a piece. I like that because most USB flash drives will only let you transfer a file that's under 4GB per file. I end up having to use a clunky old school USB disk drive to store my other files that are larger.
Your USB flash drive might be formatted on a FAT32 volume, which limits the files to 4GBs. You should (depending on how old they are and the amount of storage) be able to reformat them to exFAT to store larger video files on it.
Hi Phillip how are you? Help me with this please: To make cooking videos, between a Sony ZV-1 that costs $650 and an iPhone 12 Pro Max that costs $599, which would be the better option? I have also seen the Sony ZV-E 10 with the kit lens, but it costs $849. Please help me choose which would be better for a cooking video channel. I await your prompt response. Thank you and be well.
Word on the Cooking Creators street is we're the best SD card for 4K video 😍
This is the BEST explanation of this I've seen on TH-cam.... 1000 Thanks!
Thank you!
As a retired Licensed Broadcast Engineer, I agree with everything that Philip said except for one statement. If the camera I shoot with can only do 30 frames per second as it's top speed, of course, that what I will use., never 24 frames per second except if I am looking to replicate the low end quality of film. If you can with your camera, use 60 frames per second do so for better looking video. It's also easier to edit. That is, your edit point is twice as large and may make the difference between good edits and poor edits. Granted, the volume of the file will be twice as much as with 30 frames. If I can, I use 128 sized cards if the camera can handle it. Just set your editor to have 60 frames per second as the normal video rate and the video will not run fast. Leaving your video editor at 30 frames per second will have the video running twice as fast. Again, other than for a special effect, don't shoot 24 frames per second. This speed was picked for film because of the audio. Silent film was usually shot at 16 frames per second, a rate that made audio quality poor. That's why the old silent films ran fast because most projectors that ran sound could only run at 24 frames per second. At 24 frames per second your video will look "mushy' and have the appearance of being out of focus. For me, I never liked 24 frames per second that movies used. As a kid I didn't know why, I just didn't like it. Also, I never liked the "motion blur" caused by 24 frames. Movies shooting video will add this motion blur to satisfy those who think it's good. I'm sure these are the same people who think you can hear an explosion in outer space. But, it's your video, do what you want because you are the director of your shoot, unless you are not. Be safe. Good video.
Thanks bud! I recently actually switched to 30FPS. I don't like the look of it or 60FPS, but its what social media is wanting for IG and TikTok so I made the switch. I still shoot 24p for TH-cam. This video was shot in 24p as well.
Great explaination, thanks :)
I really like your video so clear and informative for people great job
Thank you!
Thank you! I really appreciate the way you explained it all so clearly and simply.
Thank you Philip. Very clear and helpful
That that’s exactly what I do. I use the 128V 60 one thing I would add is don’t buy brands of cards. You’ve never heard of. I bought some no-name cards that were on sale on Amazon and I had one fail. I have never had that issue withLexar Kingston, Samsung, and other major cards.
Hey Philip! What tripod do you recommend today? Could you list some few products (cheaper and more expensive ones)? I'm looking for one for few days now with your recommended features in mind (instant central column, flip locks etc.), but it's not easy. I'm looking for REALLY stable tripod, which is also not lower than 165 cm. Unfortunately majority of those fancy travel tripods are lower than 165 cm. Thanks for any help.
Can’t wait to watch the next video addressing what you said.
really helpful, thank you
Thanks you your videos❤❤❤
Thank you so much, my mind is clear now :)
I make automotive videos and I just bought a new gopro hero 13 camera. I buy a normal scandisk ultra card and my camera tell me its too slow. I need a v30 or more card. I wish gopro had told me this before I bought a card.
Great info, sir!
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you for your explanation
So , my camera can be recording with 280MB 4:2:2 10bit > is it ok when i buy V90 directly ?
Thanks
Is v30,60,90 matters to video recording only or its ok to go with v30 for full frame sonya7c2 camera?
You need a faster card if you want to shoot on a higher picture/sec rate.
Is that video still coming up? Will you show us how to transfer your videos to a SSD hard drive? 😅😅😅 just asking
Thank you.
My head hurts Philip! lol
lol just get a 128GB V30 for your ZV1
@@PhilipLemoine Thanks! 😃
Is the SanDisk 256GB 200MB SD UHS-I V30 memory card suitable for shooting raw and 4K video? What is the time available for me when shooting raw video? Will there be any restrictions when using it to shoot video at high frames?
Since most crop-sensor cameras, as far as I know, can only shoot at a maximum of 4K 120p, why do people keep buying and recommending V90 SD cards? Is there a reason beyond just video storage, such as how many burst shots you can take without hitting the camera’s buffer?
Resolution and frame rates are not the only things that can affect the video file size. Codec is another thing to consider. A crop sensor camera like the Sony ZVE10-II can shoot in a XAVC S-I codec, which can shoot up to 600M, which is 75MB/s. So you would need a v90 card. I wouldn't recommend shooting in XAVC S-I unless you were doing some greenscreen stuff anyway, so a v60 should be good to go if you shoot XAVC-S.
@@jiminyoon3910 thanks pookie
I just bought a digital video camera to record drag racing with. What card would you recommend for fast motion recording?
What camera?
Thanks so much, i was confuswd between megabit per second mentioned in camera video bitrate specs and megabytes on v class on sd cards
No problem!
I have the action 5 pro I will use it to record family moments/trips what card you recommend?
Lexar Professional GOLD microSDXC UHS-II Card americas.lexar.com/product/lexar-professional-gold-microsdxc-uhs-ii-card/
Assalamualaikum Mashallah ji very very nice vlog ❤ New subscriber friend ❤️❤️❤️👍
My action camera cuts the files up to 3GB a piece. I like that because most USB flash drives will only let you transfer a file that's under 4GB per file. I end up having to use a clunky old school USB disk drive to store my other files that are larger.
Your USB flash drive might be formatted on a FAT32 volume, which limits the files to 4GBs. You should (depending on how old they are and the amount of storage) be able to reformat them to exFAT to store larger video files on it.
@@PhilipLemoine okay thanks for the info!
@@camphikelivecalifornia3864 No problem! Just make sure you back it up first. Reformatting them to exFAT will erase everything on it.
I have low budget can I use GoPro 12 for making cooking videos like you make
Save your money and use your phone
Hi
Hi! Keep up the great videos!!!
bro disappeared after this one. is everything ok?
Yeahhhhh just wrapping my course. Non stop editing this past few months trying to finish for a Black Friday sale/launch! Thanks for checking.
Hi Phillip how are you? Help me with this please: To make cooking videos, between a Sony ZV-1 that costs $650 and an iPhone 12 Pro Max that costs $599, which would be the better option? I have also seen the Sony ZV-E 10 with the kit lens, but it costs $849. Please help me choose which would be better for a cooking video channel. I await your prompt response. Thank you and be well.
ZVE10 if you have the money!
@@PhilipLemoine Thank you bro!
Thank you