


So my Mac seems to be able to do that hardware wise, and the problem seems to be iMovie, not the hardware. Transfer video to iPhone, iPad, Android and other devices easily. Built-in video editor allow to trim, crop, add subtitle, watermark, effects to the video. If I put the videos together in Quicktime, the video is not stuttering. MP4 to iMovie - UniConverter Convert MP4 to MOV, MKV, FLV, MP3, WAV, WMA easily and other 150+ video & audio formats.

Either this is not right, because it is stuttering, or iMovie simply doesn't support a FPS of 29,97. I read somewhere in the internet that the first movie you put into your iMovie project sets the FPS for the project. I even don't see which FPS my current project has. I can't change the FPS of my iMovie project to 29,97, there is no setting for that. I don't get it where to solve that problem. If I select and preview this files, before I put them into the timeline in iMovie, there is still now stuttering.īut: If I put the video files now in the iMovie timeline and preview the videos in the timeline, the stuttering begins. Then I import the original files into iMovie into a new project. > If I watch this original files in the Macs Finder preview or in Quicktime there is no stuttering. I copy the original video files from the SD card to my mac. I hope someone can help here - I didn't find a solution for the problem.
