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  1. Member
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    Sorry for injecting myself, but.....does anyone know of people that actually digitized their Laser Disc movies or TV shows on Domesday (Preferable) or have a good quality capture with commercial equipment?

    It would be great if a person could just buy movies released on LD or VHS (those rare movie titles are only on those formats), but outside of that.....it's not easy to know if you can get a good LD player in working order and then try everything out, just to find out that the quality is not great. I'm not expecting DVD quality, but Laser Disc looked good to me back in the 80's when I first saw it, so I know what to expect. Heck, some LD's were in 1080i, so those should look better than all DVD movies, but I think that was PAL movies (I'm not sure anymore with my memory).

    Would just love to know if anyone does this or can covert LD's for me. I can buy the movie or buy directly from the converting person doing it, but I am not sure which LD discs have disc rot or other defects. I just want a copy of some titles that were not released on DVD, much less Blu-ray or UHD. Thanks all and hope I hear back soon. I appreciate it.
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  2. Capturing Memories dellsam34's Avatar
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    LD is not 1080i, it's slightly better than VHS and inferior to DVD, DVD can be 480p on a good day. LD if digitized correctly it will give you 480i but the actual horizontal resolution is equivalent to 300 samples per scan line, though the output after conversion will be 720 pixels per standard.

    Very few LD that did not make it to Blu-ray, but finding those discs is the limiting factor not to mention their high value, digitizing them is another cost that will be added to the equation.

    As to the differences in releases, I don't see the need to spend more money so you can watch a deleted scene or an alternative ending, but hey if you find that interesting and worth the money go for it.
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  3. Member
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    I also live in MI and am able to do DdD captures with laserdisc and vhs. its very time consuming, so it's only worth transferring if the vhs or LD isn't already on dvd or BD.
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  4. Capturing Memories dellsam34's Avatar
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    I agree, The doomesday and VHSdecode are very time consuming, Unless someone is converting a very rare tape or LD that has a sentimental value, it is not worth it for mass produced commercial media.
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  5. Video Restorer lordsmurf's Avatar
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    Originally Posted by dellsam34 View Post
    I agree, The doomesday and VHSdecode are very time consuming, Unless someone is converting a very rare tape or LD that has a sentimental value, it is not worth it for mass produced commercial media.
    - Yes, ld-decode (Domesday) is quite superior to analog Laserdisc transfer methods.
    - No, vhs-decode is not, still quite inferior, lots of problems, especially ringing/halo that did not exist on the original tape.

    And yes, both are extremely time consuming, require lots of drive space, gamer computer specs..
    Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
    FAQs: Best Blank DiscsBest TBCsBest VCRs for captureRestore VHS
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  6. Member
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    Originally Posted by dellsam34 View Post
    LD is not 1080i, it's slightly better than VHS and inferior to DVD, DVD can be 480p on a good day. LD if digitized correctly it will give you 480i but the actual horizontal resolution is equivalent to 300 samples per scan line, though the output after conversion will be 720 pixels per standard.

    Very few LD that did not make it to Blu-ray, but finding those discs is the limiting factor not to mention their high value, digitizing them is another cost that will be added to the equation.

    As to the differences in releases, I don't see the need to spend more money so you can watch a deleted scene or an alternative ending, but hey if you find that interesting and worth the money go for it.
    I only referred to some LD's in Japan that was a pre-cursor to blu-ray. They were only in Japan, but were specialized players and discs. They were near 1080i resolution (1035 visible lines). Heck, there were even HD VHS (known also a D-Theater) as well, but those are probably rare and not sure if those required different hardware as well. From what I have read recently, there were only around 95 titles and those started around 2002. 6 years after DVD's started, but still a good try to keep the VHS format relevant. If the price was reasonable......they could have possibly done it, but......ease of use that DVD's offered were way superior in almost every way. Heck, I remember the original Divx and I saw that before any DVD releases in stores, but......DVD's did come out first. Rant ended, LOL.

    One of the movies that I wanted to digitized was called "Watch It! (1993). It was only released on VHS or LD and I figured that LD would be the superior format to choose from. I realize it won't look as good as a DVD version would (if it was released in DVD format), but it is the only way to view whenever I get the inclination. I found there were many of this title on eBay, but knowing the condition of said LD is another factor. I can only purchase this and send it to someone who is willing to digitize it for me & go from there.

    My curiosity to figure out Domesday would make this version pristine as possible, but outside of attempting to get ahold of one and find a LD player and not having any soldering skills to get the test point right is another factor as well. I do have plenty of space on my NAS to keep the RAW data on it and then shrink this down to manageable levels of space, but doesn't do anyone doing this for me any good.

    I would love to have this movie digitized & if anyone is game...just let me know. I may have found a professional company that says they can do it for $30, but not sure how they go about things. Thank all for any insight.
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  7. Capturing Memories dellsam34's Avatar
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    If you have Hi-Vision LD discs the doomsday duplicator may not help you as it is designed to capture composite SD, The Hi-Vision format (MUSE) has a resolution of 1125i lines, This was also recorded on HDVS tape format 1" reel to reel for professional use, A similar analog HD format called W-VHS was made for consumer HDTV recording in Japan. JVC made their own digital HD format called D-VHS to record HD-MPEG-2 1080i TV channels, D-Theatre are commercially recorded HD tapes were only available in North America and Japan I believe.
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