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Yeah, I figured this was your first run and you would try to adjust things on a next recording session where you felt were needed.
Those are just tips I saw from what you posted, once you recognize what you see and get out of many, many tracking runs, you will find out just where things need to be to get the best settings/results. Once you get your Actor parameters you like, don't forget to Save the Actor file for that session for later, easier use, but it may not work on a different recording session.
The little program is really robust with the PS Eyes, but over the time I have spent working with, I have found it very vital to have your Actor scaled properly, even if for some reason it isn't the exact height of you, or another performer that's used, but if the calibration is close and cam 1 height off the ground is set close to actual lens height, your Actor height should fall very close to actual and appear in scene just seeing the very bottom of the foot under the Actors foot after refit, with the heels just so slightly off the floor grid in the T-pose.
Don't worry that every cam is exactly the actual height off ground after cam 1 height is set in calibration, all cams will usually be very close to what the program needs to see to track just fine, but of course if it's way off after refit, then somethings gone awry after calibrating and if not caught, you will loose the whole recording session if you tear down the set up first, then find out, so you should at least test one video refit and partial tracking before tear down.
I always do one calibration before recording and one after session just in case, and use the best one of the 2, but my cams are permanently fixed, so I can run a calibration at any time after recording is finished.
Sometimes the tracker will just loose tracking for no real reason, if you are watching it track and see it, you can stop and go back to the last good frame, hit refit, then track forward again and the same loss won't happen most of the time, but sometimes it will, it's just one of the quirks in the program that happen, but always better to track forward when possible, than to track backwards to fix a spot when you can, and you can switch cam view temporarily to better track areas that won't track straight through on the primary tracking cams view.
Most of my dance, or action sequences are 30 sec to 1 min continuous, with a lot of motions, so I don't like to have a lot of clean up outside the program when I can do a lot of it automatically, and even make slight changes in settings at different points in the ROI first, it's just my way, not saying it's the right way, or the best way, just how I like to do things and I get good results, before and after exporting, so that's all that really matters to me.
You got very good results for just starting, so you can't go anywhere but better from there :) Good Work!
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