You have to have an R3xx AIW for HW "assisted" encoding, all prior AIW/VIVO ATI cards, and all TV Wonder cards are totally software encoder solutions.think the ATi does real time HW encoding
Originally posted by: rbV5
It should be able to handle MPEG-2 encoding on the fly. My "media junior" rig in my sig captures without dropping frames using the "DVD high" preset in MMC. The AIW 7500 is a software encoder (likewise the TV Wonder pro, and also beatle's ASUS tuner IIRC) so it will be demanding on your rig. However, VHS is low resolution, so you can get away with lower settings. I will tell you though, that of all the video stuff I do, transfering VHS to MPEG-2 is the biggest PITA for a number of reasons.
You have to have an R3xx AIW for HW "assisted" encoding, all prior AIW/VIVO ATI cards, and all TV Wonder cards are totally software encoder solutions.think the ATi does real time HW encoding
I'll give you my $.02. I converted ~ 25 8mm to at that time, SCVD since DVD-R drives were still very expensive. Now I burn DVD disks and it is much easier. I dont personally like analog capture. File size, sync problems, capturecompression...just didn't like it. I bought a DV Camcorder (needed a new one anyway) which has analog yo digital passthrough conversion. Plug the analog in, it comes out the other side on the firewire.Originally posted by: sep
Originally posted by: rbV5
It should be able to handle MPEG-2 encoding on the fly. My "media junior" rig in my sig captures without dropping frames using the "DVD high" preset in MMC. The AIW 7500 is a software encoder (likewise the TV Wonder pro, and also beatle's ASUS tuner IIRC) so it will be demanding on your rig. However, VHS is low resolution, so you can get away with lower settings. I will tell you though, that of all the video stuff I do, transfering VHS to MPEG-2 is the biggest PITA for a number of reasons.
You have to have an R3xx AIW for HW "assisted" encoding, all prior AIW/VIVO ATI cards, and all TV Wonder cards are totally software encoder solutions.think the ATi does real time HW encoding
Do you recommend me putting this in my P4 3.06 rig? I didn't want because I don't want my rig taken up all the time. I go 32 8mm and 20 VHS tapes to convert to DVD. Okay...what about a P4 2.2 Celeron with 512MB?
Can you give me some more tips for converting these?
Thanks all,
-JC
DVDRhelp is a great place to start. IMHO, if you need to transfer the tapes and haven't purchased the hardware yet(and don't need a TV Tuner), take a good look at oldfart's recommendation. I've had a little time with a Sony TRV-9<-- I think) and I was very impressed with the analog to digital conversion, and working with DV in an editor is a dream compared to MPEG. Analog capture can be daunting, but VHS is particularly troublesome...I've never figured out a single, simple workflow that would work for my tapes without having to take some serious time to get the settings right to get an acceptable quality for nearly every single tape. With the camcorder, it was literally hook the VCR to the camcorder, connect the firewire, and "copy" it right into Premiere to edit....hard part done. From there, encoding is painless...just a little time consuming(that doesn't require you to babysit the process), if I hadn't already blown my toy budget for the year...I'd have one today, and thats how I'd be doing it.Can you give me some more tips for converting these?
Originally posted by: rbV5
DVDRhelp is a great place to start. IMHO, if you need to transfer the tapes and haven't purchased the hardware yet(and don't need a TV Tuner), take a good look at oldfart's recommendation. I've had a little time with a Sony TRV-9<-- I think) and I was very impressed with the analog to digital conversion, and working with DV in an editor is a dream compared to MPEG. Analog capture can be daunting, but VHS is particularly troublesome...I've never figured out a single, simple workflow that would work for my tapes without having to take some serious time to get the settings right to get an acceptable quality for nearly every single tape. With the camcorder, it was literally hook the VCR to the camcorder, connect the firewire, and "copy" it right into Premiere to edit....hard part done. From there, encoding is painless...just a little time consuming(that doesn't require you to babysit the process), if I hadn't already blown my toy budget for the year...I'd have one today, and thats how I'd be doing it.Can you give me some more tips for converting these?
If you need to go the analog capture card route, you can still get just as good results...it just takes more effort. Realistically, the initial rig specs you offered will handle the job. A faster rig will speed up editing and especially encoding times, but you can encode overnight or whatever.
In any event, I'll offer any help I can give you...good luck!
Not all camcorders have this feature. You will have to get the model and find out.Wait...so your saying if I borrowed a camcorder that's DV and has RCA in and Firewire out I can just pass thru the camcorder to my firewire connection?
Also are you saying that the limited processing power shouldn't hurt the quality, just the time to complete?