I have had 40 year old home movies(no sound) of my departed parents put on vhs by a company that specialized in such. They were 8mm I assume.
Now with better hardware and technology I wish to copy these vhs tapes to my hard drive and then to dvd.
I have purchased a Nexxtech TV Usb2 Box. This device comes with Honestech TV Plus software. This device will record the vhs player and record into several formats.
I read somewhere that mpeg2 was the best format for quality and working with the files later. It is not imperative that I need to play back these movies on a dvd player right away. I just need to know the very best format to save them in and perhaps change them to dvd later on.
Thanks for advice on this. There is a lot of information on this subject but I do not want to make a mistake. These movies are very important to me.
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I don't know if you have a lot of tapes, but if you do then a DVD recorder might be the best solution.
"Art is making something out of nothing and selling it." - Frank Zappa -
dvd recorder is one route to go...another option would be to invest in a decent TBC and capture them to the computer in lossless then compress it with divx with a quality setting of 1..and save to a dvdr........(lower numbers as far as divx's file quality means higher quality but bigger output sizes) i wouldnt advise this route though, if you have a lot of tapes to convert over...it can be quite time consuming...
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Hi rokky,
Welcome to the forums.
Have a root around in the "Restoration" forum, and also head over to the site: www.digitalfaq.com, you might find some useful info there too. The site is run by lordsmurf a very knowledgeable chap.There is some corner of a foreign field that is forever England: Telstra Stadium, Sydney, 22/11/2003.
Carpe diem.
If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much room. -
Uncompressed AVI would be the best quality, but you may find the size to be prohibitive. Huffy, a Max-bitrate MPG, or a DV codec would probably be the most realistic option. You could archine these to data-DVD.
Advice on editing - cut NOTHING. If you had the only 2 minutes of video of your great-grandfather in all the world, how many seconds would you choose to loose forever? -
Originally Posted by Nelson37
Originally Posted by Nelson37There is some corner of a foreign field that is forever England: Telstra Stadium, Sydney, 22/11/2003.
Carpe diem.
If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much room. -
Thanks for the replies. You folk are terrific.
I only have 2 vhs tapes - about 3 hours worth.
I am taking your advice Nelson37. I will NOT edit those recordings unless I make extra copies for that purpose.
The main thing is getting the tapes onto dvd in their present state and the best quality I can.
I have recorded the smaller tape into dvd but it is too big to get on one dvd disk. Can I safely split it?
I should have enough hard drive to use avi or the dv avi in order to make data copies.
Thanks again for the help. It is much appreciated.
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