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  1. Do they work just like they do on a VCR? Say I have a VHS tape that was taped in SP mode and has about 3 hours of coverage. If I set the DVD Recorder to SP, will all the VHS coverage fit on one DVD-R?

    Now, if say I have a VHS tape with a full six hours of coverage on it and want to transfer it to DVD, how would I go about doing that? What about a ten hour VHS tape? Do DVD recorders span discs? Will I have to stop the VHS tape after so long to switch DVD discs?

    I'm having some trouble undestanding how this all works and how much fits on a DVD-R...it's a bit confusing after 25 some odd years of VCR's. Any help anyone could offer here would be appreciated!

    Kenny
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  2. Master of Time & Space Capmaster's Avatar
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    For quality reasons you proba bly shouldn't attempt putting more than about 2-1/2 hours on a DVD. Any more than that and you'll have blocks, hesitation and other artifacts of too low a sample bitrate. It's not worth it - especially with the dirt-cheap prices of DVD blanks now.

    If you have a single taping that covers 6 hours, I suggest you capture it into 3 files of 2 hours each, and make 3 DVDs. If you stick to no more than 2 hours on a DVD you'll be OK.

    Look in your recorder's owners manual and see what setting to use for 2 hours.
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  3. Member ZippyP.'s Avatar
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    The Panasonic recorder that I am familiar with has "speed" settings which allow 2, 4 or 6 hours on a DVD. Quality drops with each setting and I never use the 6 hour setting, but then I never put more than 2 hours on a VHS tape either. The resolution and bitrate are lower with each setting which allows more video to fit on a disk.

    If the DVD runs out you can start another disk, it will have to be done manually by you though, the recorder does not "span" disks for you.
    "Art is making something out of nothing and selling it." - Frank Zappa
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  4. Video Restorer lordsmurf's Avatar
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    A good recorder (like a JVC) will be fine up to 4 hours. Mediocre units like a Panasonic tend to look bad after 2 hours.
    Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
    FAQs: Best Blank DiscsBest TBCsBest VCRs for captureRestore VHS
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  5. Thanks, folks, for the replies. I have a new Toshiba DR2.

    Ok, as for capturing a six hour tape into 3 - 2 hour dvd's. Fisrt, this is being done with a stand alone dvd, not a computer drive so as far as creating 3 files, that's not going to do it. I guess i'll just have to watch my times and stop everything when they approach two hours, switch dvds, then proceed, correct? Is there an available DVD disc that I could get the full six hours on say like a DVD-RAM double side?

    I did waste a dvd today just seeing if I had everything setup right. I burned about five minutes of a VHS tape, finalized it, and it played back perfectly. It actually looked better on DVD than on the VHS.

    Thanks again all!
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  6. Is there an available DVD disc that I could get the full six hours on say like a DVD-RAM double side?
    Even if you have a DVD-RAM double side, you still need to flip the disc manually to use the other side. Just like using a cassette tape in the old days.
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