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Recording VHS To DVD Using A PC
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OldMedia
Newbie
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11. October 2008 @ 10:01 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Hi

I need help determing how to take my store bought VHS tapes and recording them to DVD. I have read that you legally can make one copy. I intend on storing the original VHS in the garage attic for safe keeping. After reading some of the postings I concluded that you can use a Hauppnauge PVR-150, 250,350 or 500 board to capture the analog video via s-video. I purchased a Haup PVR-150 PCI board.

I have a Sony RDR-VX515 DVD / VHS combo player that I am taking the S-video out and into a Sima SED-CM Copy Master in order to clean up the VHS Signal. From the Sima I take a s-video cable to the computer and into the Hauppnauge PVR-150.

I am using a HP Pavilion with a Pentium Dual Core Processor running Vista Premium 64. The video graphics is a intergrated system from Nvidia.

I have attempted to use Cyber Link DVD Suite Deluxe that came as the bundled software with the PC. I am able to capture a video signal but the playback on the PC is jerky. Frames freeze from one to another. Also when I attempt to record I get the copy protection warning. From what I had previously read, either the Hauppnauge or the Sima would remove the signal and neither one is doing so.

Is it the integrated video driver ? I am new to this and only experience that I have is from what I have been reading on these postings. Can anyone help ?

Thank you very much, OldMedia
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zambi
Newbie
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11. December 2008 @ 19:06 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
I've been researching this myself. I have large collection of VHS
tapes I want to convert to digital files (e.g. DVD, avi, mpeg). I
want to do it as easy and quickly as possible but also try to get
the best video quality I can. From what I've seen the best option
is NOT to use a cheap USB capture device because the encoders are
typically too slow to keep up (i.e. dropped frames, sync problems)
or the encoding produced is low quality. So in general its better to
use a hardware based encoder to convert analog-to-digital. That means
using a commercial DVD recorder or a converter box from Canopus. The
latter is probably too expensive and not as robust (i.e. can use for
other things) as DVD recorder. So you playback your VHS tapes from VCR
into a DVD recorder (or use a VHS/DVD combo) and record to DVD. Then
from there you can rip the DVD to hard drive using AnyDVD or DVDFab.

This provides a cheap/easy method with good quality capture. However
there are two cons -- (1) you end up burning lot of DVDs and (2) you
have to spend extra time ripping to hard drive. For (1) you could use
rewriteable DVDs but their capacity is limited (e.g. if you want to record 6hrs of VHS on one DVD you must use DVD+R DL). For (2) you
could try using something capture devices like ION's VCR2PC or Honestech's VHS to DVD but like I said above these typically produce
low quality and error prone conversions. They may be better options if
you just want to transfer video clips for low quality use (e.g. youtube postings).
zambi
Newbie
_
11. December 2008 @ 19:20 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
I should also add here that its better to use seperate VCR and DVD
recorder. Why? This way you can defeat Macrovision protection of
VHS tapes by inserting a TBC-1000 between the VCR and DVD recorder to
eliminate the Macrovision distortion.
warren37
Suspended due to non-functional email address
_
16. December 2008 @ 02:35 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Originally posted by zambi:
I've been researching this myself. I have large collection of VHS
tapes I want to convert to digital files (e.g. DVD, avi, mpeg). I
want to do it as easy and quickly as possible but also try to get
the best video quality I can. From what I've seen the best option
is NOT to use a cheap USB capture device because the encoders are
typically too slow to keep up (i.e. dropped frames, sync problems)
or the encoding produced is low quality. So in general its better to
use a hardware based encoder to convert analog-to-digital. That means
using a commercial DVD recorder or a converter box from Canopus. The
latter is probably too expensive and not as robust (i.e. can use for
other things) as DVD recorder. So you playback your VHS tapes from VCR
into a DVD recorder (or use a VHS/DVD combo) and record to DVD. Then
from there you can rip the DVD to hard drive using AnyDVD or DVDFab.

This provides a cheap/easy method with good quality capture. However
there are two cons -- (1) you end up burning lot of DVDs and (2) you
have to spend extra time ripping to hard drive. For (1) you could use
rewriteable DVDs but their capacity is limited (e.g. if you want to record 6hrs of VHS on one DVD you must use DVD+R DL). For (2) you
could try using something capture devices like ION's VCR2PC or Honestech's VHS to DVD but like I said above these typically produce
low quality and error prone conversions. They may be better options if
you just want to transfer video clips for low quality use (e.g. youtube postings).


w37
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warren37
Suspended due to non-functional email address
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16. December 2008 @ 02:40 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Originally posted by warren37:
Originally posted by zambi:
I've been researching this myself. I have large collection of VHS
tapes I want to convert to digital files (e.g. DVD, avi, mpeg). I
want to do it as easy and quickly as possible but also try to get
the best video quality I can. From what I've seen the best option
is NOT to use a cheap USB capture device because the encoders are
typically too slow to keep up (i.e. dropped frames, sync problems)
or the encoding produced is low quality. So in general its better to
use a hardware based encoder to convert analog-to-digital. That means
using a commercial DVD recorder or a converter box from Canopus. The
latter is probably too expensive and not as robust (i.e. can use for
other things) as DVD recorder. So you playback your VHS tapes from VCR
into a DVD recorder (or use a VHS/DVD combo) and record to DVD. Then
from there you can rip the DVD to hard drive using AnyDVD or DVDFab.

This provides a cheap/easy method with good quality capture. However
there are two cons -- (1) you end up burning lot of DVDs and (2) you
have to spend extra time ripping to hard drive. For (1) you could use
rewriteable DVDs but their capacity is limited (e.g. if you want to record 6hrs of VHS on one DVD you must use DVD+R DL). For (2) you
could try using something capture devices like ION's VCR2PC or Honestech's VHS to DVD but like I said above these typically produce
low quality and error prone conversions. They may be better options if
you just want to transfer video clips for low quality use (e.g. youtube postings).



Are you saying that I can transfer video from vhs to dvd using a vcr/dvd combo ?

w37
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