When a Take is selected from the Data pane, related information will be displayed in the Properties pane.
From the Properties pane, you can get the general information about the Take, including the total number of recorded frames, capture data/time, and the list of assets involved in the recording. Also, when needed, the solver settings that were used in the recorded TAK can be modified, and these changes will be applied when performing post-processing reconstruction.
Take name
The camera frame rate in which the take was captured. The Take file will contain the corresponding number of frames for each second.
The frame ID of the first frame saved on the Take.
The frame ID of the last frame saved on the Take.
A timestamp of when the recording was first captured started.
A timestamp of when the recording was ended.
Names of assets that are included in the Take
Comments regarding the take can be noted here for additional information.
Marks the best take. Takes that are marked as best can also be accessed via Motive Batch Processor scripts.
Date and time when the capture was recorded.
The version of Motive which the Take was recorded in. (This applies only to Takes that were captured in versions 1.10 or above)
The build of Motive which the Take was recorded in.
The data quality of the Take which can be flagged by users.
Progress indicator for showing how into the post-processing workflow that this Take has made.
Camera system calibration details for the selected Take. Takes recorded in older versions of Motive may not contain this data.
Shows when the cameras were calibrated.
Shows mean residual offset value during calibration.
Displays percentile distribution of the residual errors.
Displays a mean error value of the detected wand length samples throughout the wanding process.
Displays percentile distribution of the wand errors.
Shows what type of wand was used: Standard, Active, or Micron series.
Displays the length of the calibration wand used for the capture.
Distance from one of the end markers to the center marker, specifically the shorter segment.
The camera filter settings in the Take properties determine which IR lights from the recorded 2D camera data contributes to the post-processing reconstruction pipeline when re-calulating the 3D data when needed.
For more information on these settings in Live mode, please refer to the Application Settings: Live Pipeline page.
The Solver/Reconstruction settings under the Take properties are the 3D data solver parameters that were used to obtain the 3D data saved in the Take file. In Edit mode, you can change these parameters and perform the post-processing reconstruction pipeline to obtain a new set of 3D data with the modified parameters.
For more information on these settings in Live mode, please refer to the Application Settings: Live Pipeline page.