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  1. Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Australia
    Search Comp PM
    I am having a lot of difficulty capturing video. The comp is powerful enough (AMD 6000 1 GB 500GB HDD) etc

    The problem I have is either the capture card or the software. I am using a fusion HDTV pro, Divco Fussion HDTV Pro PCI TV Tuner card.

    This card captures with composite. I can only find one piece of software that will “work” and that’s, wait for it windows movie maker. Now one of the problems with that is that it crashes. I am capturing about 3 hours at a time.

    I have tried sony veagus and adobe premiere none of which will recognize the card L

    All I want is very easy but I am getting a little fed up with it so now I am asking for help

    I need to know If I need a new card if so which one and what software to use.

    I would really like it to capture in a compressed file mpeg, divx or something quality has to be good but not insane the file has to be editable (suggestions welcome). Minimal steps is a must.

    I have two cameras that go into a pip splitter and a mic. (Datavideo SE-500 Analogue Video Mixer/Switcher</SPAN> G.D.B. International - Datavideo SE-500 Analogue Video Mixer/Switcher)

    I need a card and software that will capture from this devise.
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  2. Mod Neophyte redwudz's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2002
    Location
    USA
    Search Comp PM
    Have you looked into the Hauppauge hardware MPEG cards? That would give you minimal steps if your final format is going to be MPEG or DVD.

    http://www.hauppauge.com/

    And welcome to our forums.
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  3. Member dadrab's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    State of Denial, U.S.
    Search Comp PM
    You sound like a good candidate for a Hauppauge PVR350 and VideoRedo.

    You'll get good caputures in MPEG2 format. Just use the capture software included with the card. You get the bonus of having a TV tuner (SD) built into the card.

    You can then take that footage and edit it with VideoRedo. That's a really nice piece of software for cutting commercials and making short clips using MPEG formatted footage. No need to re-encode. Heavy duty editing might take some heavier duty software, but I've not needed it yet.

    I've been using these exact tools for about a year now and have been pleased. I've even gone to a friend's place who has a pretty nice (52") HDTV and tried out some of my discs using my Denon upcoverting DVD player through an HDMI cable. The stuff I've capped and authored/burned looks pretty damn good to my eyes and hers.

    I figured that I should get a real look at what I'm doing on an HD set. I've not taken the plunge yet, but it's coming - sooner than later.
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