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  1. Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Canada
    Search Comp PM
    (This is a question to owners of the LG LRH-780 HD/DVD recorder)
    Hi,

    I am thinking of buying the LG LRH-780 HD/DVD recorder, but before doing so
    I need to find out exactly how long one can record on a Dual Layer DVD
    at the maximum quality (XP). Can one record a *full* 2 hours of video?

    I think that some DVD recorders (like the Liteon HD-760) record a few minutes less
    than two full hours (at XP on DL disks), and this is a serious drawback for me:
    I need to archive about one hundred 2hours 8mm Svideo tapes, and I don't
    want to lose few minutes at the end of each tape, or to record at a lower quality
    than XP.

    Thanks a lot for your help!
    Quote Quote  
  2. It's not quite 2 hours on any DVD Recorder assuming they use the maximum allowed bitrate for XP (or HQ as it may be called on some models).

    I usually get about 115 minutes. 5 minutes less than 2 hours. Once again, this is not the "fault" of the recorder as much as it is the size of a DL disc as it compares to the maximum allowed DVD-compliant MPEG2 bitrate. The designers of the DVD Recorders do not choose this maximum allowed bitrate, it is in the DVD Specifications, they just conform to those specifications.

    EDIT: Using a ballpark total bitrate of 10Mb/s, and a disc size of 8.55GB, I get exactly 114 minutes. Authoring takes up some space too, and 10Mb/s is a bit generous, usually it's either:

    8Mb/s video plus 1.536Mb/s audio (LPCM) or
    9.2Mb/s video plus 0.384Mb/s audio (AC3)

    which comes to 9.536Mb/s for LPCM and 9.584Mb/s for AC3.

    Rounding that to 9.6Mb/s, and dividing that into the 8.55GB disc size yields 118.75 minutes. And again, some of that space will be needed for authoring information. Also, there is a small amount of overhead in both the VOB files themselves, and the file structure that contains them, but it is just a tiny fraction of a percent of the total capacity of the disc.
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  3. Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Canada
    Search Comp PM
    Thanks a lot for your detailed and informative reply.

    This means that to backup 120-minutes Hi-8 video tapes
    at the highest possible quality on DL disks, I need to
    find a DVD recorder that is capable of "best fit"
    (flexible) recording.

    I think the LG LRH-780 that I was considering does not provide
    such a recording mode, so I will have to look for another HD/DVD recorder...
    Quote Quote  
  4. I use a Pioneer 633 for such things, the newer model (640) can easily do it.

    One step down in recording quality (MN31) should be plenty to allow the extra 5-10 minutes to fit.

    Be sure to record at that quality first to the HDD, then High-Speed dub to DL DVD, to avoid the "Title-Split" problem that happens with Real-Time dubs.
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  5. Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Canada
    Search Comp PM
    Hi,

    Thanks for your Pioneer recommendation
    and the tip to first dub the tape on the HD.

    Unfortunately the Pioneer 640 (the currently available model)
    does not have a DV input, something that I found very convenient
    to have on my Liteon 5005: it is nice to use just a single cable
    to transfer from a DV camcorder...

    But I guess I will have to compromise somewhere!
    Quote Quote  
  6. Oh right. Yes that is unfortunate. I got used to having it on my 633, forgot the dropped it for the 640.
    Quote Quote  
  7. Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Canada
    Search Comp PM
    I got used to having it on my 633, forgot the dropped it for the 640.
    Yes, that's what they call progress
    Quote Quote  
  8. Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Canada
    Search Comp PM
    Hi,

    i m locking for the free zone code for my LG LRH-780 HD/DVD recorder I need to find out exactly how i can make it free zone, because i have many dvd from France..

    thanks a lot
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  9. i know this is a old thread but i think i found what you were looking for in this thread:

    http://www.digitalhome.ca/forum/showthread.php?t=42509
    Quote Quote  



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