

Here are five useful things you can do with it.Īdobe disabled the Time Warp filter in CS5 and subsequent versions. Click the dropdown button in the top right and select Debug Database View.Ī list of various hidden options will appear. You may have to also hold down Fn on a laptop.Ī blank window will appear.

To access it, press Cmd+F12 on the Mac or Ctrl+F12 on the PC. Note, if you plan to use Smart Rendering, the preview codec you choose is important.Adobe Premiere Pro has a little-known Console window that provides access to hidden functions. This bunch of numbers is the folder (in the same path as above) that your editing mode uses. Open the file in a text editor, and look for If your sequence settings use a different mode, save a sequence preset of this type with a useful name, and then find the file here:Ĭ:\Users\Ford\AppData\Roaming\Adobe\Premiere Pro\6.0\Settings\Custom The folder above depends on the ‘editing mode’ Premiere uses. And it works on existing sequences of the same type. That’s it, don’t even need to restart Premiere IIRC, just reopen the sequence config (if not, do). (mine was found in C:\Program Files (x86)\Adobe\Adobe Premiere Pro CS4\Settings\EncoderPresets\SequencePreview\795454D9-D3C2-429d-9474-923AB13B7018) to add full QuickTime support, find ‘ QuickTime.EPR‘ and copy it into this folder. EPR files for all the preview render codecs you normally see in a custom sequenceĮg. codec preset) file toĬ:\Program Files\Adobe\Adobe Premiere Pro CS6\Settings\EncoderPresets\SequencePreview\9678AF98-A7B7-4bdb-B477-7AC9C8DF4A4E

Googling threw up exactly nothing and I spent some time trying to hack config files – turns out it’s much easier!Īssuming a custom sequence configuration (other editing modes may use other paths, see below), and CS6 (probably works on current versions too if you find the right paths): I needed this to work in 4:4:4 with my preferred lossless codec (UT in this case), but you may also want it for unusual frame sizes etc. So you want more codecs for rendering Premiere previews on Windows (may work on Mac too, not sure)?
