

The easy workaround is to convert the MTS files to After Effects friendly video formats. In a word, if you want to make a short film from MTS footage with Adobe After Effects and prefer fluent playback, you'd better to do some work in advance. By the way, in order to play MTS videos on PC smoothly, your processor must be very powerful.

H.264 encoded MTS video is highly compressed, good for transporting, but poor for editing. *.mts is a filename extension used for AVCHD, a high-definition recording format designed by Sony and Panasonic that uses H.264 (conforming to H.264 while adding additional application-specific features and constraints) codec. Firstly you get to learn a bit about the MTS format. Why should this happen? Let me explain it. When I render this 10sec long video its come out to be 700mb and the video also very choppy and skips a lot. It also very choppy and will not play in fps real time. I have this AVCHD(.mts/.m2ts) 10 sec long clip when I play it back it lose a lot of quality.
#Adobe after effects mac cs6 full#
So I have After Effects cs5 full version.
#Adobe after effects mac cs6 movie#
Convert/Compress MTS files for editing in After Effects CS4/CS5/CS6Īlthough Adobe announced that After Effects natively supports AVCHD importing, and mostly you can import MTS to After Effects for editing, you'll find the movie hops back and forth, or the video quality lost when you play it as the users described below.
