Hello-
I'm new to capturing, burning to DVD, etc., and I'm having mixed results. My primary goal is to transfer 23 VHS tapes of a TV series ("Soap", remember that?) to DVDs in case our tapes deteriorate. (The tapes are from Columbia House, not off-the-air recordings)
I started with a Datavideo DAC-100, and had very little success. It captured some other commercial VHS movies we have without a problem, but results with the Sope tapes, as well as some others, were useless. When the capture hit an apparent weak spot on the tape, the DAC-100 couldn't recover, and the remainder of the capture was worthless.
I traded up to a Canopus ADVC-100, and have had somewhat better results, but still not satisfactory. The Canopus seems to recover quickly from a problem spot on the tape, but the result is a capture with many frames missing, spotty audio, etc., as you would expect.
I should note that these tapes are nicely & completely viewable on a VCR; smooth video, no dropouts, good color, etc. Which makes me wonder why I'm having trouble capturing them.
From some reading on this forum & elsewhere, it seems that a time base corrector may be what I need to improve my results. I just bought a Datavideo TBC-3000 on Ebay, hoping that this is the case, and I'd appreciate any suggestions, comments, confirmation that I'm going in the right direction, etc.
One specific question: The TBC-3000 doesn't appear to have audio inputs & outputs, yet others, such as the TBC-1000 do. Will I be missing something with the TBC-3000 in bypassing it with the audio, i.e., going directly from my VCR into the Canopus ADVC-100? I'd assume that the TBC must insert some amount of time delay in the video; is it just negligible, or what?
Thanks for any comments, suggestions, laughter, or whatever!
Stvee.
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I can't help you much, but all I have to say is DAMN
you are the guy that outbid me by $3
You got a hell of a deal on that unit, that's for sure. -
Are you serious? Man, it really is a small world!
It'll be a good deal if it helps me capture all those VHS tapes. If not, it'll be back on Ebay. One went a couple of weeks ago for about $200, I was hoping this one would also. Oh well.
Steve. -
The TBC-1000 has audio connections for distribution convienience only; they are bufferred and distributed out with no delay. The video delay through the TBC-1000 (and TBC-3000) is less than one frame, so it is indeed negligible.
The TBC-3000 is essentially two video only TBC-1000s with synchronized outputs. But it also has video proc controls, which is very nice. It has eliminated the audio/video skew problems that I had been having when capturing SHVS to DVD. -
Man, all this trouble just to transfer some commercial videotapes over to vhs? Why not just buy a dvd recorder for like $400 and do it that way?
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Originally Posted by zanosWant my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
But stevedore simply wants to backup 23 old columbia house tapes to dvd. The TBCs in the recorders are satisfactory for this task and will save him at least a year on his life. As far as I can tell all this is unnecessary.
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Originally Posted by zanosWant my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
[quote="stevedore"]One specific question: The TBC-3000 doesn't appear to have audio inputs & outputs, yet others, such as the TBC-1000 do. Will I be missing something with the TBC-3000 in bypassing it with the audio, i.e., going directly from my VCR into the Canopus ADVC-100? I'd assume that the TBC must insert some amount of time delay in the video; is it just negligible, or what?[quote]
I don't know much about the DV converters, but they seem a bit pricey for the type of captures you're doing.
Aren't those things sort of on the order of Dazzle and Snappy - I'd avoid those, 'cause I hear nothing but bad things about 'em.
I never had any capture prpblems with ATI AIW cards (just driver issues...lol) - even the cheapest ones did great captures of stuff from very old tapes (like from 1979 and 1980) and stuff recorded in EP/SLP mode.
None of my VHS tapes have deteriorated (that is noticable anyway) spanning over two decades.
Why not just use a capture card?
What type of VCR are you using - that could have something to do with it. -
Originally Posted by zanos
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Originally Posted by zanos
Besides, I'm an engineer; there are times that I NEED to waste endless amounts of money & time on "hobbies" like this.
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