![]() Bkool will group points in the GPX file to create short segments so you can still get cases where slope changes suddenly and unrealistically. I've usually been able to use the Bkool Video editor to correct those, but sill find that slopes are off in the uploaded route in Bkool (when just uploading a route). **Despite elevate correcting my GPX files (using FitFileRepairTool and its Mapquest elevation tool) I still get elevation and slope errors in Bkool VideoRouteEditor2. not sure thats possible but wld like to know if there are any tricks there. * While VIRB Edit has been helpful in trimming and positioning the video footage with the GPX I have not been able to embed the GPX so the export from VIRB is recognized as having GPS. Is Rouvy any better?Īll I want to do is load a few of my local rides for winter training. NOTE: The battery will not charge when outside the approved charging temperature range (Specifications, page 14). Easily edit and view 360 videos, add 4K spherical stabilization and add augmented reality G-Metrix data overlays (available only on VIRB 360). I've been able to sync separately recorded GPX with the video in VIRB Edit* and get them relatively synced in Bkool VideoRouteEditor2** however Bkool has rejected 100% of my videos despite them being cleaner and clearer than other user loaded videos I see on the site!īkool support has not clarified whats wrong with my videos despite numerous attempts to contact them. I’d really like to have more analysis of women’s races, though, so at some point I may get into it.Click to expand.Anyone still reading this thread? I want to try Rouvy because I'm very frustrated with Bkool. So here is my question: has anyone placed the GoPro gps data in the gmetrix fields so that it gives me GPS data on Virb Edit My other option is to ignore the GoPro gps data, and buy a Garmin watch to record data and use that. But as most of us know, the GoPro software is absolutely unusable. ![]() I tried Davinci Resolve and it kept crashing… I think that my computer is just too slow. The image stabilization on the GoPro is just too good. Maybe someday I’ll get into the whole cuts/audio, but I need a newer computer for that. I am primarily videoing for my own review/learning and posting for sharing within my team. They’re all just the race and that’s it, not really meant for teaching or providing my own comments or anything like that. The video may take awhile to import, but it works. ![]() fit file (or the video) comes from–the Virb software will work with it. And is right–it doesn’t matter where the. However, I learned that the trick is to make sure you keep the headunit recording until you’ve moved off course and then stop–presumably your wahoo will make an audible beep for when you stop, and then you can use both the video and the beep to match the video with the map. fit file was rather a pain, particularly for a crit. I found that the GoPro was just kind of a slow process, and aligning the video with the track from the. You can view his video here, though, to see his workflow. VIRB Edit will now attempt to default to the correct unit settings (e.g. used to use (and maybe still does?) Dashware to get his overlays, but I found that system to be rather cumbersome. G-Metrix data has to be imported with the clip or added manually later. I think that even TR uses the Virb software to get the overlay, but then they use Davinci Resolve for all of the slick editing (picture in picture, cuts, replays, slo-mo, audio overlay…) they do. About the best way to get the overlay that I know of is to use the Virb software. I’m not an expert, but I’ve used both a GoPro and a Virb.
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