Quote:
Originally Posted by sneaker_ger
Exact 24.000 Hz would not solve the problem because 1000ms/24 = 41,666....ms. It would not be exact in mkv either.
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The clock of a modern player runs typically at 90000 or 45000 Hz (it's 45000 for the BD players). But you are right for the time codes. It's why, in all pro studios, edits are always made at 24 or 25fps, with timecodes in the form HH:MM:SS:ff, where ff is a number of frames, not a fraction of a second. The conversion to the NTSC frame rate is always made when all edits are finished, and there is no need to use precise time codes any more... except for the chapter points of the BDs or DVDs.