HEVC stands for High Efficiency Video Coding, a.k.a H.26 5, which is known for ultra-compressed video file outputs (low file-size). Here is another forum thread which discusses the big dilemma: Can't import HEVC-videos to Premiere Pro (2018)Īdobe said even said on the forum: "HEVC is not a very performant format, I would recommend you create proxies or transcode the footage at ingest." Some searching, the problem was the video codec HEVC. I have imported downloaded YouTube videos before only to have them play out of sync to their audio.
My iPhone X codec after converting them: MP4/MOV H.264 4:2:0
IPhone8XL Video Codec Type: MP4/MOV H.264 4:2:0
(you can see video codecs by right-clicking any imported clip and selecting "Properties.") The difference here is the Codec used for iPhone-X videos verses other footage, like my friend's previous iPhone8XL. Mp4 through Adobe Encoder and imported my files again. I encoded my original buggy files to a (matched) High-Bit rate. I believe it has nothing to do with operating power. The way Adobe Premiere handles iPhone-X footage is defective. The video was choppy (Proxies were utilized) but footage came out properly. I took film class last college semester and we operated Lumix 4K video. Therefore, I downgraded to Premiere CC 2018 and repeated the same process. This is the first time we've had an issue. My friend got this iPhone-X recently and this is the first time we've used it for Youtube. Video had audio exact, but the video only played the beginning parts of each original clip until it switched to another I took the proxies out ("bypassed") before rendering. The few seconds of any clip, whether played on the original screen (for selecting parts) or on the timeline. My Imported iPhone-X footage came in choppy, and would repeat If Adobe premiere is processing it right. Nah, I'm having the same issue right now, looked up this exact phone (iphone X) to see