Capture video faster than realtime
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Gil_a
Newbie
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21. July 2003 @ 15:36 |
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I have a lot of analog cassettes in VHS and BetacamSP format. I need to capture and and compress them into MPEG format.
Is there anyway to do this is in a fatser than realtime mode, i.e. if I have a 1-hour cassette is there a way to capture it in less than 1 hour ?
Are there VHS or Beta players that can play in fast forward inclduing a pitched audio ?
Gil
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jnihil
Moderator
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27. July 2003 @ 05:33 |
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Never heard of anyone doing this. How many tapes do you have?
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crehren
Suspended due to non-functional email address
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30. July 2003 @ 10:18 |
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I've worked on a couple decks, quite some time ago, which are capable of doing that. Unfortunately I can't give you any brands or models to look for. It's all pro gear and costs a pretty penny too.
If they sell 'em like they sell the photographic systems I work on you have to buy or lease the entire system. Good luck.
If you find something on the consumer side of the price scale please let us know (I'd love to get one too).
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jnihil
Moderator
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30. July 2003 @ 17:15 |
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You're talking about tape-to-tape decks aren't you?
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crehren
Suspended due to non-functional email address
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30. July 2003 @ 18:19 |
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Nope, the one's I was using dumped straight into a PC for editing in Premier. That was in college a few years ago. There was only one deck on the systems I had to use.
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jnihil
Moderator
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31. July 2003 @ 04:18 |
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Really? Amazing. So Premiere was setup to capture at more than 25/29.97 frames per second?
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crehren
Suspended due to non-functional email address
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31. July 2003 @ 09:52 |
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No, Premiere wasn't used for capture, just editing, there was some other capture app. You'd just set the start and stop times and let her go. I think it was probably more a matter of the card the deck was connected to. The deck didn't seem all that special to me, but I'm very from from even being able to consider myself a hobbyist.
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jnihil
Moderator
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31. July 2003 @ 17:55 |
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Yeah, I would say it was a special capture card. Couldn't imagine too many vendors making the capture hardware to support the analog video signal at accelerated rates.
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crehren
Suspended due to non-functional email address
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31. July 2003 @ 22:31 |
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They've probably never made it to the consumer market due to the fact that DV came out so quick. I guess that they wouldn't want to waste the money trying to appeal to the consumer market until PC's were readily capable of handling it. By the time that you average PC was powerful enough and for a low enough cost, DV had hit and pretty much killed analog's potential market.
I used one in college and a local public access TV station I did some work for had just received one from a local network affiliate. I just didn't realize that they were that uncommon. I wonder if you couldn't find one on E-Bay for a reasonable price.
Heck, Now I think I'd like to get my hands on one just for the novelty...
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Gil_a
Newbie
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2. August 2003 @ 23:41 |
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I originated the question, and now I want to summarize my understanding:
1. It was a special deck tape that was capable of playing the video in an accelerated speed, without dropping any frame and with a pitched audio.
2. The tape deck was connected to a special capture card installed in a PC. The capture card captured the video in faster than real time (e.g. in twice a speed than realtime) and dumped the data to a file on the PC.
3. Permier was capable to use the file for Editing purpose.
Is these understandings are correct?
Any clue on the vendors?
Thanks
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lowboy
Newbie
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4. September 2003 @ 13:35 |
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Not to vere off to much here but... i was looking for a caputre solution myself, but not interested in real time so much as S-VHS to MPEG 1/VCD. What hardware/ AD/DA capture device and or software would simply get me to burning VCD's? in other words, what are some solutions to getting my S-VHS to VCD (as an MPEG 1)quickly with out all that rendering time.
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