You mean the VP? The youtube doesn't have the frame rate.In ultra slomo (thanks again, Bob) you can see the CB hit the OB again and move forward in the air a little before coming down and drawing slightly to go straight across table.
pj
chgo
You mean the VP? The youtube doesn't have the frame rate.In ultra slomo (thanks again, Bob) you can see the CB hit the OB again and move forward in the air a little before coming down and drawing slightly to go straight across table.
pj
chgo
Amazing work Bob, thanks.This can be recreated in Virtual Pool. The result is very, very touchy about the exact speed, elevation and position of the balls.
Here's a video of something close to the shot. Note that the 8 and 9 leave at about the same speed. I didn't get the direction quite right, but I think that could be fixed with another half hour of fiddling.
Try [shift] [<] like Bob mentioned - you can slow it w-a-y down (but probably not as far as VP).You mean the VP? The youtube doesn't have the frame rate.
Yes, if you pause a YouTube video, and then right click on the video, you will see "stats for nerds" in the dropdown menu. When you select that, it will give you the frame rate, along with other information.You mean the VP? The youtube doesn't have the frame rate.
I meant the available frame rate. Even at 1080 res I doubt the original is going even 30 per.Yes, if you pause a YouTube video, and then right click on the video, you will see "stats for nerds" in the dropdown menu. When you select that, it will give you the frame rate, along with other information.
'bout to attempt this.Try [shift] [<] like Bob mentioned - you can slow it w-a-y down (but probably not as far as VP).
pj
chgo
The frame rate is determined by the camera used to capture the video. just like the resolution. The resolution can be downgraded if your bandwidth is limited, but the FPS remains the same.I meant the available frame rate. Even at 1080 res I doubt the original is going even 30 per.
'bout to attempt this.
I gotta start looking at those stats. I so far just check the gear thing for 720 or 1080. At any rate you can can't get any more frames than there are and the clip shows no second impact even though BJ's logic is correct. I gotta see that specific shot in slomo to believe it. lol...The frame rate is determined by the camera used to capture the video. just like the resolution. The resolution can be downgraded if your bandwidth is limited, but the FPS remains the same.
When you right click on the video and get the nerd stats, it only reflects how the video is being displayed.
The original video linked says it is 30 FPS.
This is from Google (YouTube):
Content should be encoded and uploaded in the same frame rate it was recorded. Common frame rates include: 24, 25, 30, 48, 50, 60 frames per second (other frame rates are also acceptable). Interlaced content should be deinterlaced before uploading.