Hi, I'm relatively new to Video capturing stuff, sorry if this is really obvious.
I've been trying to capture some old footage off a 8mm tape using our old family Sanyo VM-D66P, a cheap £20 AV converter I got off amazon, and VideoDub2.
I initially set everything up, tested it and it ran smoothly; I then tested VideoDub using a VHS player, which ran good; then I ran into some unrelated trouble with the driver (fine now); then getting back to do the actual recording I think either the camcorder or the tape has now been corrupted.
The audio levels are way too high, with DB levels reaching 0 DB on VideoDub (making childhood memories sound like a static hellish nightmare). I initially thought it was the driver, again, but testing it on another PC (and the TV) produced the same results; I then thought it might be the sampling rates but that didn't help either. I repeated this a couple of times on the same area of playback before realising what was up.
Testing it with a recording on a blank tape and the issue repeated itself on playback, though not to the same degree. Unfortunately I don't have any recordings to give a sample. Just to note, it was working perfectly the first time I ran it.
So have I f**d up and destroyed the tape? Or would it be possible to recover it using another camcorder / Lowering the DB levels in something like audacity?
Try StreamFab Downloader and download from Netflix, Amazon, Youtube! Or Try DVDFab and copy Blu-rays! or rip iTunes movies!
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 5 of 5
Thread
-
-
If it is happening when outputting to the TV, sounds like it's baked into the tape permanently.
-
Audio levels being to high seems to be a common issue with USB capture card. The manufactures have put little effort into the drivers (and the products in general), and lack of audio level control is one thing that is common. On some (using empia chips) it can be lowered by changing a registry setting, on others not possible. If the audio level is too high it will clip and create horrible static, there is not much you can do with it after it's been captured with too high levels. 8mm audio levels are typically a bit higher than VHS mono audio which may explain the difference.
On cameras you can sometimes use the headphone output with a minijack -> RCA adapter, and lower the volume on the camera. Alternatively you need to lower the audio level that gets to the audio inputs in a different way, with an external volume control, mixer, or similar.
That said there could be issues with the camera too, audio on 8mm tapes is FM-encoded (a bit like FM-radio), so if there are problems reading it off the tape you get horrible noise. The audio on 8mm is stored together with the video on the tape, so video and audio issues are often linked here. -
It wasn't occurring on the initial run... Why would it start to do this?
And is there anyway of getting it back? Or should I just record it and attempt to salvage what I can. -
Similar Threads
-
Sony Z1 mini-DV tape to Final Cut Pro on mac: which camcorder?
By FayeD1977 in forum Camcorders (DV/HDV/AVCHD/HD)Replies: 2Last Post: 15th Mar 2017, 10:39 -
Video8 tape losing picture, played on a Digital8 camcorder.
By digicube in forum Camcorders (DV/HDV/AVCHD/HD)Replies: 16Last Post: 5th Oct 2016, 08:25 -
VCR to DV Camcorder Tape
By VHSRules in forum Camcorders (DV/HDV/AVCHD/HD)Replies: 3Last Post: 1st Mar 2016, 18:03 -
Vintage Panasonic M5 camcorder wont eject tape
By coffee_king in forum CapturingReplies: 1Last Post: 23rd Nov 2015, 21:35 -
Recommend a minidv tape camcorder with hdmi, only for *playback*
By Movie-Maker in forum Camcorders (DV/HDV/AVCHD/HD)Replies: 2Last Post: 9th May 2015, 17:54