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  1. 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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  2. Member
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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.
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  3. 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.
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  4. Preservationist davideck's Avatar
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    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.
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  5. 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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  6. Video Restorer lordsmurf's Avatar
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    Originally Posted by zanos
    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?
    Because the TBCs being discussed are way above the level of the ones included in the recorders.
    Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
    FAQs: Best Blank DiscsBest TBCsBest VCRs for captureRestore VHS
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  7. 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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  8. Video Restorer lordsmurf's Avatar
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    Originally Posted by zanos
    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.
    I missed that. Yeah. For original videos, if a TBC is even needed, the medium one in a recorder should be more than adequate.
    Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
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  9. [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.
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  10. Originally Posted by zanos
    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?
    I thought about that, but then thought that doing captures & using software for menus, chapters, authoring, etc. would give me a better end product. Besides, messing with this stuff is fun, isn't it?
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  11. Originally Posted by zanos
    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.
    If the 23 tapes go OK, I'll have a lot more to do. We have about 50 VHS movies that I wouldn't spend $$ to buy new on DVD, but I'm willing to transfer them to DVD for the cost of a blank DVD-R. And a pile of old 8MM home movies that I'd like to edit & put on DVD. And when I'm done, I can put this TBC back on Ebay & get most of my $$ back.

    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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