DVD recorder with hard drive

Dorkenstein

Diamond Member
Jul 23, 2004
3,554
0
0
I have tapes that I need to convert to DVD somehow and I need to do it practically on a shoe-string.

Can I hook my crap vcr to any DVD recorder with hard drive and expect quality on par with the original tape or is it worse? Also, none of this is commercial VHS so I don't need to worry about protection. Thanks for any useful knowledge.
 

CalvinHobbes

Diamond Member
Feb 27, 2004
3,524
0
0
All you would have to do is video out from VCR to Video In of DVD Recorder. Quality should be identical to the output unless you select high compression.
 

Dorkenstein

Diamond Member
Jul 23, 2004
3,554
0
0
Whew, thanks. Do I need a picture stabilizer? I think thats what it was called. Also, do you know of an inexpensive dvd recorder that would suit my purpose? Thanks for your reply.
 

PurdueRy

Lifer
Nov 12, 2004
13,837
4
0
Originally posted by: Dorkenstein
Whew, thanks. Do I need a picture stabilizer? I think thats what it was called. Also, do you know of an inexpensive dvd recorder that would suit my purpose? Thanks for your reply.

Not if you only intend on recording home movies.
 

Dorkenstein

Diamond Member
Jul 23, 2004
3,554
0
0
So the picture stabilizer doesn't merely improve all vhs tapes, it just improves commercial ones?
 

PurdueRy

Lifer
Nov 12, 2004
13,837
4
0
Originally posted by: Dorkenstein
So the picture stabilizer doesn't merely improve all vhs tapes, it just improves commercial ones?

If you and I are talking about the same thing, its used to be able to record commercial VHS tapes, which many DVD recorders/VHS players do not let you do.
 

DaveSimmons

Elite Member
Aug 12, 2001
40,730
670
126
Why a hard drive? If you don't need to do editing you can record directly from tape to disc, then copy the discs with your PC's burner.

Just test this once or twice to see how the recorder settings should be set and whether you need to "finalize" the discs before copying them or playing them on the PC.

Also, be careful about using the higher compression / longer time settings. When I was copying laserdiscs to a Hauppage card, I used the lowest DVD format which was only about 1:15 per disc. Picking a 2+ hour setting is going to look much worse than a commercial DVD since you're encoding once in real-time instead of using fancy multi-pass optmizing to change the encoding bitrate from second to second.