I was going through my parent's stuff and came across an old camcorder they used in the 1990s. It seems a shame to me to throw away the lens and electronics. Does anyone know if these can be set up to make digital recordings? I know that the video quality on VHS was crummy but didn't know if that was a limitation of the camera technology or the recording media. Any insight is appreciated.
Steve Lauhoff
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Well if the camcorder does have an S-Video or Composite video output (it most likely has one) as well as audio you can record the signal with anything you like (say a USB-Capture device connected to a Laptop to make it portable; or a more modern MiniDV/Digital8 camcorder with analog in).
However, do not expect pristine quality with this. It's still analog SD video from an old consumer video camera with (probably) a single CCD sensor, but it should be much better than recording to VHS indeed. -
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It's a proprietary connector.
Should be close to impossible to find a cable, but it should work if you modify/solder any ordinary Composite cable to the right 2 pins (if it's a VHS camcorder, rather than S-VHS, then there is almost certainly no S-Video output, only Composite). -
Thanks, Skiller. Do you think that it would be possible to replace the circuit board with one that has an S-video output port? Would there also be a way that the analog SD video could be upgraded in that manner, too? I like the form factor of the camera and if the lenses are decent quality, perhaps some internal electronics updgrades could yield a good quality recording camera. I just hate throwing things away...
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Judging by the blaring silence(make and model), I'm guessing the quality really isn't all the great.
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That must be one special piece of glass and sensor. Pics please.
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does your computer have a firewire port? If so you can use another camcorder to convert the video to digital. A few years ago I bought a Sony DCR-TRV480 off eBay to convert some old analog Video8 tapes to DVD. The TRV480 can take an analog input, and iMovie recognizes it as a video source. Back when I used Windows I used a utility called WinDV.
You don't have to get the same camcorder as me, some camcorders support this, and some do not. -
Naw, it's easy. All you need is a trash compactor and $100.
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Last edited by KarMa; 25th Feb 2016 at 19:27. Reason: spelling
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Had a thought (and my head hurts.
). What about taking out the tape transport and there should be enough space for a Raspberry Pi (or other micro PC) with a USB Vidcap device or wired directly into the video output. Might be an interesting project, especially for higher end (maybe old ENG) cams with better optics.
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FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
Well, maybe he wants to have that certain 80's/90's home video retro look (but without recording to VHS).
Here is an amazing (in my opinion) example of this that I found on YouTube recently. It was shot on a 1984 Newvicon tube video camera in 2013 and it really looks like it was shot in the 80's. It was shot on VHS but very well transferred to YouTube.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4hw5ICu9gqc -
There are plenty of algorithms (in AVISynth & Virtualdub) that can give basically the same output, but don't require all the Rube Goldberg shenanigans that would be necessary to complete this project.
As was mentioned, even bypassing VHS record-playback, there are existing problems with this flow:
1. Low quality camera (both optics & electronics)
2. NTSC SD video
3. Analog will need digitization.
Scott -
Much simpler than all that. All you need is a GOOD video analog-to-digital converter device. Then, do with your camcorder as you would for your VHS recorder for converting tapes to disk: just connect the two cables (red and yellow) for audio and video, use the camera as if with a tape on an click on "record" on the PC (as you would for tape conversion). Cheers, Pedro
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