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DVD Creation Station

jjessico

Senior member
May 29, 2002
733
0
0
I am building a PC for a friend who wants to take his old VHS tapes and convert them to DVDs. I checked around and came up with the following system for doing the job as cheap as possible. What do you guys think of this config?

Processor: AMD AthlonXP 2100+ w/HSF------------------------------$100.58*MWAVE
Motherboard: ASUS A7N8X DLX----------------------------------------$145.12*MWAVE
RAM: CORSAIR CMX256A-2700C2 32X64 333MHZ 256MB CAS2--------$094.14*MWAVE
Video Card: ATI ALL-IN-WONDER RADEON 7500 64MB--------------------$118.65*MWAVE
Hard Drive: WD 80GB 800JB EIDE ULTRA-ATA/66-100 8.9MS-------------$108.00*MWAVE
Floppy: SONY 1.44MB FLOPPY DRIVE------------------------------$011.90*MWAVE
DVD Burner: SONY DUAL DVD+RW/RW 4.7GB 24X/10X/32X CDRW DRU500A----$345.65*MWAVE
Sound Card: N/A Integrated----------------------------------------$000.00*MWAVE
NIC Card: N/A Integrated----------------------------------------$000.00*MWAVE
Input: MS MULTIMEDIA OPTICAL VALUE PACK-KEYBOARD & MOUSE-----$028.00*MWAVE
Case: Antec 350-Watt ATX Mid-Tower Case Model: 80841--------$099.00*BESTBUY
Monitor: Samsung 17in SyncMaster FD Trinitron------------------$159.99*BESTBUY
Totals: Shipping and Tax not included---------------------~~~$1197.00
 

LethalWolfe

Diamond Member
Apr 14, 2001
3,679
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I'd get him a 20gig or so HDD for the OS and proggies and another 80gig (120 would be better) HDD or two for the a/v files. Does he want to copy some VHS home movies, or copy some of his retail VHS titles to DVD. Remember that you can only fit 90-120minutes of video (depending on compression) on consumer DVD blanks. Keep in mind that after drives become around 75% full they might start slowing down and dropping frames. So, to be safe, if he gets an 80gig HDD for a/v he should plan on, roughly, only 60gigs of usuable space.


Lethal
 

jjessico

Senior member
May 29, 2002
733
0
0
All home movies, so it should work out ok. Does anyone have a suggestion for a different DVD burner? That one is realy expensive and I'm not sure he needs all that functionality just to make set top DVDs. Anyone have other ideas?

 

LethalWolfe

Diamond Member
Apr 14, 2001
3,679
0
0
The only other option is something like the Pioneer DVD-R/RW burner. It won't burn "+" media, but if "-" media works in his DVD player that shouldn't be an issue.


Lethal
 

jjessico

Senior member
May 29, 2002
733
0
0
Hmmm, is there any master list of what players play what new DVD recordable standards?

Thanks,
Jason
 

Duvie

Elite Member
Feb 5, 2001
16,215
0
71
I can tell you my dvr-104 pioneer burned a dvd-rw (not just a dvd-r) and worked in my panasonic dvd-rplayer that is over 1 year old...It also played in 3 dvd-roms I tried. I heard and read in a pc magazine that dvd-r is almost a sure bet to work in all dvd players 1 year or newer...

The sony offers the most format proofing since there are so many competing formats. The +r/+rw models offer a bit of speed advantage in the sense I read they do not have to close session at end of disk and I guess they can allow editing right on the media without having to reburn it!!! Pretty nice.