Because, as I explained earlier, the Project Settings you are using, is based on bottom-field first for field interlacing - this will always be factored in when rendering out the timeline. This is a separate issue from being able to control any individual clip's interlacing. When you render, it's the Project's settings that become the source properties. Not the clip. This is a facet of being able to edit multiple frame sizes, frame rates and formats together on one single timeline. If we rendered on a clip level, such a multi-format mixed editing concept would be lost.
This again, is why a single-format editor for MPEG (Womble, MPEG Streamclip, Cuttermaran) will champion GOP-based editing over EDIUS.
Did you also confirm the GOP structure as Brandon pointed out above?
EDIUS MPEG encoding GOP structure = IBBPBBPBBPBBPBB
PSG (apparent) MPEG encoding GOP structure = IPPBPPBPPBPPBPP
It may just be a GUI typo. But if that's genuinely what the PSG encoder produces, it too will be a determining factor in why the EDIUS MPEG encoder will force a reencode.
This again, is why a single-format editor for MPEG (Womble, MPEG Streamclip, Cuttermaran) will champion GOP-based editing over EDIUS.
Did you also confirm the GOP structure as Brandon pointed out above?
EDIUS MPEG encoding GOP structure = IBBPBBPBBPBBPBB
PSG (apparent) MPEG encoding GOP structure = IPPBPPBPPBPPBPP
It may just be a GUI typo. But if that's genuinely what the PSG encoder produces, it too will be a determining factor in why the EDIUS MPEG encoder will force a reencode.
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