You can make a difference in the Apple Support Community!

When you sign up with your Apple Account, you can provide valuable feedback to other community members by upvoting helpful replies and User Tips.

Trouble exporting HDR video from FCP for YouTube or Plex

I've watched many tutorials and have read Apple's help articles, but still am not having success getting my HDR edits exported and looking proper in apps like Plex, or websites like YouTube. The image in my exported HDR videos look blown out, whether viewing on my iPhone, my HDR monitor, or my HDR TV.


See in the attached image the comparison.

On the left is my viewer in Final Cut Pro 11. (I use my M4 iPad Pro as my display for the viewer)

In the center is the exported video viewed in Quicktime Player on macOS.

On the right side is the same exported video being played in Plex.

Here you can see how blown out the image is. The greens look neon, and you lose a lot of detail in the sky.

It appears this way using Plex player on my Mac, but also using Plex on my HDR TV.


In my export settings, color space was set to: Wide Gamut - Rec. 2020 HLG

For video codec, I tried both HEVC 10-bit and HEVC 10-bit w/ Dobly Vision 8.4 (see both screenshots of the info panel from viewing with Quicktime).


Any ideas why these HDR exports are looking blown out when being played in Plex or YouTube?

Thanks for the help!

Mac Studio (2023)

Posted on Nov 15, 2024 3:38 PM

Reply
4 replies

Nov 16, 2024 4:14 PM in response to Brian Covalt

What version of MacOS are you running? There may be a Sequoia HDR issue if playing Rec.2020 HLG content in FCP 11 over HDMI to an external monitor. Are you using an HDMI monitor? It does not happen if using a Thunderbolt display, Apple Studio display, or the built-in XDR display on late-model Apple Silicon MacBook Pros.


I just tested it via a USB-C connection from my M1 Ultra Mac Studio to my 3rd-gen 11" iPad Pro, and it seems to also affect that IF the HLG content is played within FCP and using the iPad Pro as the viewer. It does not happen if you play the HLG content in Quicktime on the Mac using the iPad Pro as the viewer.


For Quicktime or Plex playback, what type of monitor is on your Mac and what is the color profile in use, as shown in System Settings>Displays?


You showed three playback images. Are those all being played back from the Mac, using the iPad Pro as the monitor? If one is the iPad Pro, and the other two are some other non-HDR monitor, that will not look the same. If there is a difference between Quicktime vs Plex playback to that monitor, Quicktime is a color-managed app that supports ColorSync. If Plex is not color-managed, it will not look the same. That is similar to a video not looking the same if played back in Quicktime vs VLC.

Nov 17, 2024 4:25 PM in response to joema

Yeah I'm on macOS Sequoia 15.1.

I'm not using an HDMI monitor.

My main display is an LG ultrawide connected via thunderbolt, and I view my HDR content on my M4 iPad Pro (2024).

And yes, I understand image won't look the same on a non-HDR monitor. Testing these on my iPad Pro since it's my only true HDR display connected to my Mac Studio. (my LG monitor claims HDR, but it's really not).

On the Plex forum, someone suggested not using HLG as it's not widely supported yet. I changed my FCP project to PQ and exported, and it at least looks better - not blown out, just not quite as bright when viewed in the Plex player compared to how good it looks in my FCP project. The bright point doesn't seem to reach the same limit. Not sure why that'd be, but at least PQ HDR is looking a lot better.

Nov 19, 2024 7:59 AM in response to Brian Covalt

I have both an Apple Studio and LG 5k Thunderbolt displays connected to my M1 Ultra Mac Studio running Sequoia 15.1 and FCP 11.0. I use various SDR ICC color profiles on the LG, but usually Rec.709 100 nit gamma 2.4. If an iPhone Rec.2020 HLG Dolby Vision video is played in Quicktime Player, it looks OK on the LG SDR monitor. It obviously does not display as HDR, but the color and gamma is as expected for SDR. If played on a USB-C connected 3rd-gen iPad Pro it looks more like HDR. If played on the Apple Studio display using the MacOS P3-600 nit preset, it looks more like HDR.


The same is true when I play the iPhone HLG video in the FCP viewer. On HDR-capable monitors it looks like HDR. On SDR-capable monitors it looks perfectly OK, just not HDR.


That is using Quicktime or FCP playback. If using VLC playback it looks like SDR even on an HDR-capable display. That is because VLC is not color-managed, does not read the NCLC tags and doesn't know it is HDR material.


If I upload that to Youtube, it depends on what browser is used for playback. Currently MacOS Safari does not support HDR on Youtube but it does on Vimeo. MacOS Firefox does support HDR on Youtube. This can be seen by right-clicking on the Youtube playback window and selecting "Stats for Nerds." On Safari it shows 'color: bt709/bt709. On Firefox it shows (HLG)/bt2020.


You can also do that test using existing Youtube HDR/HLG content by querying for "HDR Channel" and viewing one of those. But your uploaded HLG material should behave similarly: IOW, it will look good on a late-generation iPad Pro or MacBook Pro with a built-in XDR display, will not look like HDR if using MacOS Safari with an HDR-capable monitor, but will look like HDR if using MacOS Firefox with an HDR-capable display. If used on a Mac with an SDR display, the streamed HLG material should OK, only like SDR.


When a MacOS app plays a video, if it's color-managed, it will behave like Quicktime Player. This assumes the monitor display profile shown in MacOS>Displays is appropriate for the material. If it is not color-managed and not HDR-aware, it is unpredictable.


Edit/add: However, there is a possible issue on Sequoia 15.1 and FCP 10.8.1 and 11.0 involving HDR content from the FCP viewer (not Quicktime) over HDMI, whereby it doesn't display correctly. I am still investigating that.


Trouble exporting HDR video from FCP for YouTube or Plex

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.