I have a Avermedia TV tuner card hooked up to coax-cable that I use to capture TV programs. I also have a VCR that I've use to capture my VHS movies (for backup) by VCR via RCA cable ==> DV Camera ==> DV passthrough via Firewire ==> Computer.
I wasn't happy with the ability of my TV tuner card to tune to certain channels. They were noisy. So I thought that I'd use the tuner on my VCR. I did this by running the coax-cable to the VCR then coax from the VCR to my Aver TV tuner card. The quality of the TV was greatly impoved.
Now, I though why don't I just capture my VHS movies using the coax instead of the DV camera passthrough. However, the quality of the capture was significantly degraded using the coax. Even using Huffyuv 720x480 I noticed a significant and poorer difference versus using DV passthrough.
I guess the DV camera via the RCA cable does a better job in the anlog to digital conversion than does the TV tuner. Also, now if I want a quality capture of a TV program I can use the DV passthrough method.
I justed wanted to share my obsevations. Do they make sense?
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Are you using quality coax cables? Do you have a power filter?
My guess would be this is where your problem lies... -
They make perfect sense, think about it. You are starting with a video signal in the VCR, either from a tape or from the tuner and you then have two choices. Pass that video signal to your DV camcorder where it is converted to data and transferred by Firewire to your hard drive. A single conversion step.
Alternatively, you start off with the same video signal, pass it through a very cheap and crude radio frequency modulator to turn it into a radio frequency signal (also converting any stereo audio that you may have had in the first place into mono). You then pass this through a length of coax cable to an equally cheap low quality radio receiver (the tuner on your TV card) which converts to back into video. Your computer then converts that video signal into a data stream (in whatever format you have chosen) and it finally ends up on the hard drive. Three lots of conversion.
Is it really surprising that the quality is better with passthrough, particularly when you said that the tuner in the TV card isn't too clever in the first place? -
Thanks for all the replies.
Originally Posted by Richard_G
Originally Posted by Richard_G
Originally Posted by upshot
Originally Posted by upshot
Originally Posted by gadgetguy -
I'm using VirtualVCR for my TV captures. If I remember correctly, I do believe there is a scheduler for that. .
I need to make sure that the VCR is on the channel I wish to record -
Originally Posted by rkr1958
Of course, there is always the middle way. Use analogue video and stereo audio from the RCA connectors and put that straight into the inputs on your TV card/sound card. You can then do an analogue capture that bypasses the two stages of conversion in the modulator and TV tuner and capture to whatever format you choose using whatever codec you choose. Personally, I gave up using this method as soon as I had DV passthrough as an option. Best quality, minimum grief! -
Personally, I gave up using this method as soon as I had DV passthrough as an option. Best quality, minimum grief!
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Maybe I missed something here (I read this rather quickly) but you can use your VCR as a tuner but output via the standard RCA video and audio jacks to your Avermedia card.
I have an Avermedia AverTV Stereo and the capture quality is very good but you can't use the coax input you have to use the RCA composite or S-Video input.
The tuner is poor quality so yes you will get better quality using a VCR as a tuner.
Also coax cable for video is shit so this is another reason why the VCR to Capture card connection should be with composite or S-Video.
NTSC DV is crippled by the 4:1:1 color sampling. No such problems with the Avermedia (or most PCI type "TV Tuner" type capture cards).
I belive PAL DV does not use 4:1:1 but the DV codec is still a lossy codec. You would be better off using HuffyUV with a quality PCI capture card.
What Avermedia card do you have?
- John "FulciLives" Coleman"The eyes are the first thing that you have to destroy ... because they have seen too many bad things" - Lucio Fulci
EXPLORE THE FILMS OF LUCIO FULCI - THE MAESTRO OF GORE
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Originally Posted by FulciLives
Originally Posted by FulciLives
Originally Posted by FulciLives -
rkr1958,
I used to have problem with Hauppauge WinTV card poor signal reception. When you scan your TV channel, try set to antenna instead of cable TV. For me, it improves a lot. This is what the test suggested to me. -
My Avermedia capture card has composite video and S-Video inputs.
If your card only has S-Video input then chances are it came with some sort of adapter with a female composite jack on one side and a male S-Video jack on the other side to convert a composite singal to S-Video for input.
You can also buy such connectors at Radio Shack or you could buy a cheap S-VHS VCR to use as a tuner then use the S-Video output on it.
I wish I could give you more info but I am not familiar with that particular Avermedia capture card.
- John "FulciLives" Coleman"The eyes are the first thing that you have to destroy ... because they have seen too many bad things" - Lucio Fulci
EXPLORE THE FILMS OF LUCIO FULCI - THE MAESTRO OF GORE
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