TJ Skywasher

Q: Final Cut Pro X Exported Video Size

I've recently bought Final Cut Pro X and use it for editing videos before uploading to YouTube.  I used to export my videos from iMovie as a .mov file to my hard drive to then manually upload to YouTube.  There doesn't seem to be this option in Final Cut, so I've taken to using the YouTube share feature but it never uploads so I just manually upload the .mov file that it saves somewhere in the Final Cut shared files folder.

 

The problem I have is that I export a 720P file so assumed that the video size would be 1280 x 720, it always was with iMove.  I've found that Final Cut spits out the video at 1248 x 702 and this is quite annoying as it sometimes cuts off the top and bottom of a video.  Is there any reason why it does this or any way to get it to export at the correct display size?

MacBook Pro, Mac OS X (10.7.1), 2.4GHz, 4GB Ram, 320GB HD, 256MB Gr

Posted on May 14, 2012 2:24 PM

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Q: Final Cut Pro X Exported Video Size

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  • by Tom Wolsky,

    Tom Wolsky Tom Wolsky Feb 2, 2013 11:42 AM in response to Tom Wolsky
    Level 10 (118,413 points)
    Apple TV
    Feb 2, 2013 11:42 AM in response to Tom Wolsky

    Just to add, if you can set it to actual size you are not using the optimal retina display in Display preferences. And even if you set Display to the highest resolution it doesn't fit properly because the computer screen aperture is different from the video. All this of course has absolutely nothing to do with the video file that's produced and the way YouTube displays it. Also the QuickTime player does not behave correctly when the retina screen is not set to its best setting. Basically what you're complaining about is how you see it in the QT player and not the way any one else views it on YouTube or a Blu-ray player or Apple TV or any other delivery mechanism, unless you're assuming that your viewers are all using the QT player on a retina screen with a non-optimal setting. Maybe that is the case.

  • by TJ Skywasher,

    TJ Skywasher TJ Skywasher Feb 2, 2013 11:46 AM in response to Tom Wolsky
    Level 1 (20 points)
    Mac OS X
    Feb 2, 2013 11:46 AM in response to Tom Wolsky

    The video is still chopped off and displayed at the incorrect size whatever I view it in, even if I export it and upload straight to YouTube. Viewing in Quicktime just helped me understand why, because looking at the Movie Inspector confirmed it was at an irregular size. Removing the clean aperture setting has rectified the issue and all vidoes exported are shown correctly now.

  • by J-Powers,

    J-Powers J-Powers Feb 11, 2013 10:44 PM in response to Tom Wolsky
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Feb 11, 2013 10:44 PM in response to Tom Wolsky

    I am having similar problem. I am new to FCP (having started in iMovie).

     

    The clips for my first movie total about 6 GB, but the .mov file that I save to my desktop clocks in at more than 13 GBs. I recorded 1920 x 1080p at 24 frames

     

    Any idea what is going on an how I can resolve this. I want to publish on Vimeo.

  • by gooober,

    gooober gooober Mar 24, 2015 9:08 AM in response to TJ Skywasher
    Level 1 (34 points)
    Mac OS X
    Mar 24, 2015 9:08 AM in response to TJ Skywasher

    Hello TJ!

     

    I had much of the same issue as you and found that the answer was not in a particular elusive setting which I could not find in Final Cut Pro X.

     

    The issue was Final Cut Pro trying to make a portrait video into a "Widescreen video" when exported. All I had to do was crop the widescreen edges off of either side of the video, then export.

     

    Warm regards,

     

    Mark

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