Or is it simply that movement in the video appears choppy -- in which case this is an artifact of shutter-speed.
A 180 degree shutter at 25 FPS is 1/50th but footage shot at 50FPS with a 180 degree shutter will be 1/100th which produces less motion blur. As a result, high FPS footage placed on a lower FPS framerate will always apper more jerky when there's rapid movement. You can reduce this effect somewhat by using the motion blur control on the color page but the results will *never* be as good as using source material with the correct framerate and shutter speed in the first place.
Resolve 19 Studio, Fusion 9 Studio CPU: i7 8700, OS: Windows 10 32GB RAM, GPU: RTX3060 I'm refugee from Sony Vegas slicing video for my YouTube channels.
You can try to use a 360 degree shutter when recording in 50p. Are you sure that no frame interpolation is activated in the project? It may kick in even if not needed. Is your video still choppy after export?
My disaster protection: export a .drp file to a physically separated storage regularly. Please visit digitalproduction.com/author/uliplank/
Studio 19.1.3 2017 iMac, MacOS 13.7.4, eGPU MacBook M1 Pro and M4 Pro mini, MacOS 14.7.5 SE, USM G3
Try the following: Mark the video clip - scroll all the way down in the INSPECTOR and select "OPTICAL FLOW" under RETIME AND SCALING in the RETIME PROCESS.