I have a sony TRV11 MiniDV camera. I am capturing the video using a firewire card. The quality on the camera is PERFECT (both on the LCD screen as well as plugged directly to the TV). However, the quality on the playback on the computer is WAY inferior! I use Windows Media Player 9.
The quality issues are as follows:
- When panning the camera around, the image seem to pixelize... and then stabalizes as the video becomes more static.
- There are jagged lines around the different objects in the video... and it becomes worse with more movement.
I have tried capturing with ShowBiz (arcsoft), Pinnacle Studio 8, Windows Movie Maker... and I am getting the same exact results.
I tried burning the video to the DVD and play it on my TV... but the quality issues persist.
What you capture should be identicle to what's on the tape as it is a digital transfer.
What are you capturing it as?
It should be AVI if it's mpeg then you are re-encoding it as you capture.
I am capturing it as MPEG2. I thought that is the best quality. When I capture it using Movie maker... it saves it as AVI... But it presents the same quality issues.
Well I'm a beginner myself, but you need to capture as AVI. I use Ulead Videostudio to do this, which captures it directly as DV in AVI format.
Once you are done with your editing then you can convert to mpeg (1 or 2 depending on what you are going to do with it)
Further reading makes me think that this may be a field versus frames problem with your capture.
This is not something that I fully understand at present but interlaced sources produce two pictures for each frame that are then laced together during playback.
The way that it is captured can affect this process as can the saving to mpeg
I have done some further testing, and following are the results...
If I capture in MPG using the ShowBiz software and create the DVD I get the problem. However, if I capture it in AVI and burn it... the problem is no longer there. It seems to be playing fine... However, when capturing in AVI... the files are extremely large... and it takes a very long time for it to convert it back to MPG when creating the DVD.
Any idea why this would happen when capturing in MPG and not in AVI?
With regards to the last message posted... the digital camera is fine... since when I plug it directly to the TV, the quality is spectacular!
avi is a more "pure" format mepg is like an MP3
and when the pc cant keep up it will throw away your quality it takes a long time because there is a huge amount data on and avi and the encoder
is trying to keep what it thinks will look the best that is why diferent encoders will give different results
tommays