enable custom frame rate on export in premiere pro 2020
Please enable 'custom' frame rate option on export settings,
so that users who are editing for example source footage
coming from 8mm or 16mm based on frame rates like 16fps or 18fps,
can export them to such frame rates or other.
you can check the thread here:
https://community.adobe.com/t5/premiere-pro/export-18fps-sequence/td-p/10486209?page=1

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Oliver Valerio commented
Yeah this really is a little suprising to see that this isn't an option after years of this software's history. Choosing the frame rates in between create either duplicate or discarded frames in a given video. Why can't a custom framerate option be implemented when it seems to be relatively easy to add? Is it really to keep paid plugins that offer this from becoming obsolete?
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Julien Dorgere commented
Come on Adobe. Davinci can do it, FCP can do it, Avid can do it, Nucoda can do it. Give us at least 16 and 18fps which are common for 8mm and 16mm silent films.
Plenty of people working with film scans, be it archival material or freshly shot super8 or 16mm film…
There is zero excuse for this feature not to be available.
Besides it would speed up export considerably, especially with the hardware h264 encoding capabilities -
Michael Gerrity commented
Antoine, you are spamming. You're right, your solution disincentivizes Adobe from adding the feature, but there's no way on **** I'm paying for a feature that should be native to the app.
Thank you for sharing your solution to the problem, now kindly leave this thread. If people need more help they should do it directly through your platform, this is wasting everyone's time.
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Antoine Autokroma.com (Independent Developer of AfterCodecs, BRAW Studio, PlumePack, Influx) commented
We can discuss this by email https://www.autokroma.com/contact but in theory AfterCodecs is only getting the frames Adobe Premiere sends it, there should be no slow down. It could be choppy because hard to decode 120 fps at real time though ! Depends on your computer and video player
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Gregor Pesek commented
I just uninstalled Autokroma successfully and the export menu works fine
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Gregor Pesek commented
Now I also tried the latest trial version and the video is choppy even when it's playing at normal speed
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Gregor Pesek commented
Btw I tried the beta and exported input video of 120 fps to output 120 and in meta data the exported video says 120fps but when i slow down the footage it's definitely not 120 fps because it becomes choppy
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Bedrich Chaloupka commented
I know that, this is not the place for Autokroma support discussion, but yes, the Export dialog window simply did not open after the uninstall of the AfterCodecs trial plugin version. Only reinstall of PP helped.
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Antoine Autokroma.com (Independent Developer of AfterCodecs, BRAW Studio, PlumePack, Influx) commented
weird, i've never seen an export menu getting broken
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Bedrich Chaloupka commented
Actually, I tried to use trial of AfterCodecs in PP 2022 and after uninstall of the plugin I had to reinstall the PP as the Export menu got broken. :(
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Antoine Autokroma.com (Independent Developer of AfterCodecs, BRAW Studio, PlumePack, Influx) commented
Gregor, just tested v1.10.8 on Premiere Pro v22.1.1 on Windows 10 and it worked, please contact us to fix your issue https://www.autokroma.com/contact
Pat, sorry for the additional messages, I want to fix your issues, and anything fixed here gives more time for Adobe to fix others things more important and broken for now
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Pat commented
Autokroma, you should stop spamming. This is adobe-video.uservoice.com and not a place to advertise and debug/support your product.
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Gregor Pesek commented
Antoine it doesn't work with PP 2022 for me. Only works with PP 2021
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Antoine Autokroma.com (Independent Developer of AfterCodecs, BRAW Studio, PlumePack, Influx) commented
Here's how to do it with AfterCodecs https://www.autokroma.com/blog/How-to-Export-Custom-Framerates-PPro-AME/
Do you people also need decimal framerate too, for example 15.56 fps ? We could add that
Regards
Antoine -
Bill Cotter commented
Another vote for being able to select the correct frame rate for 8mm film.
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Jef Herrmann commented
I tested the method of building the proxy with After Effect, and then use it with Premiere as recommended by one of this community members. That did help as I was stuck but evidently it disturbed my workflow significantly, and the 2022 version of Premiere still did not address the issue, what a pity! It seems to be so simple to fix, just respect the fps of the original instead of changing it to 15 fps. Who is using 15 fps anyway?
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Ben Coonley commented
Can't understand why Adobe still hasn't made this improvement. Anyone editing Super-8 film or 8mm in its native frame rate really needs this.
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Jef Herrmann commented
Same request for the proxies
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Michael Gerrity commented
This is absolutely essential for anyone who is working with archival footage. I really don't know why this option isn't available in Premiere. This seems like one of those issues where the developers think they know better than the client, but unfortunately, they're wrong. If I'm working with archival footage in 18fps, I need to be able to keep it in 18fps upon export. If for no other reason, this way I can accurately reference frames from the exported file back to the original. If I sample frames up to 24 or down to 15, it doesn't matter if it "looks" the same, it's not accurate to the original. Adobe, PLEASE fix this.
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Antoine Autokroma.com (Independent Developer of AfterCodecs, BRAW Studio, PlumePack, Influx) commented
Thanks Lance we appreciate the good words and we're glad it works for you