As annoying as it is that this is how it HAS to be done without any options to change it in the preferences, I am aware why it is done.Īs far as the 'a little reading will help' comment goes, I already went to the Go Pro site and looked over all that that material already prior to posting this. It's the way to GoPro formats to the SD card. My initial reply to was before your edit. The file system dictates how large files are handled. clip 1 will be first clip that is 4.3Gb, clip (1+n) will be the first clip that is not 4.3Gb.ĭoes the GoPro site offer any guidance? It is a common problem with SD cards. Your clip sequence may not comprise 4 clips. The clip segments need to re assembled.Ĭlip1.MP4 is the first file in sequence (4.3Gb), clip4.mp4 is the last file in sequence and will be less than 4.3Gb. The recording time of each clip will determine its size.Gopro recording also creates sequentialy numbered files. GoPro recording breaks the file into about 4.3Gb chunks. Old fashioned DOSĬopy /b clip1.mp4+clip2.mp4+clip3.mp4+clip4.mp4 combined.mp4 I even tried cross fading them one frame to see if that would help, but it's still noticeable.įrom memory something like this works. You can tell that these where 2 separate files that are are transitioning well from one to the other. I tried adding slight audio fades on the audio to prevent this from happening, but it didn't work. you can't tell they are separate files.įor the most part, this is the same when the files are playing back on the Vegas time line, but there is slight 'pop' or 'audio glitch' when it makes the transition from one file to the next.
When i put these files in VLC media player and play them back to back, it's a seamless transition.
This particular test I did, it would create a new video file after every 5 minuets and 20 seconds of recording. What I found is, the GoPro automatically creates separate files of the video after the file gets to a certain size. I recorded a good 15 to 20 straight minuets with it for a test.