Hi,
I go from my VCR through my TRV820E camcorder and then to my PC, via Firewire cable. When I open VirtualDub/VirtualDub2 I see video and get sound and I am able to capture but only in Uncompressed. There are no other codecs I can choose. YES, I looked at this thread, but it did not help.
I tried everything, including installing utvideo and many other codecs, but it will not work. I also do not see an option for source or capture pin???
Having said that, by pure coincident, I noticed that I could pick and use a different codecs, when I chose my Webcam as capture device!? I also see now capture pin but source is still not giving me any options, which I guess is OK because I am getting a video and sound feed.
This is on a 12-year-old Dell Vostro running Windows 10. I also installed the Legacy IEEE 1349 driver, but still, no codecs. I also installed Sony Home Movie Something, I forgot the name, bit I read somewhere that this should fix the problem. Of course, it didn't.
My question is, does this have something to do with the Camcorder, Firewire cable, firewire driver, VirtualDub or with what?
I also captured with WinDV which worked, but I have no idea which one I should use. i feel like VirtualDub is "better" because it has more settings to choose from. According to this and many other posts, WinDV is the way to go. However, that post is old so who knows what is "best" these days?
Thanks.
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I am not sure, but I took an "educated" guess, since my only option is Uncompressed DVSD.
Post a mediainfo text mode report of a sample.
AFAIK vdub/2 can not use any codec since you do not have an analog source capture device. DV, just as with WinDV, is the only option.
thanks for the fast reply. -
Now read the report and under video you will see the proof:
Format: DV -
I guess that "proofs" that there is nothing wrong with VirtualDub, and that there are no codecs visible because there is no Analog video. Right? Analog Video = Codecs, Digital Video = No codecs. Right.
That also means that I could use WinDV since I was concerned that I cannot really chose any settings. But I guess WinDV works the same way. It is a digital signal, thus nothing really to choose from. At least that is how I understand it.
Thanks.
P.S. Now I remember reading that a camcorder only transfers the footage to the computer and that might be the reason there are not codecs to choose from!? -
Copy that! Thanks again.
P.S. Since I have you one the "line", I might as well ask... I also have a DMR-ES15 and EH55. The plan is to go from my VCR (S-VHS but no TBC. I honestly think my tapes do no need TBC), through the ES15 or EH55, then into the camcorder and from there digital via Firewire to the PC. Any reason that might be a bad idea?
P.P.S. The camcorder has tbc. -
If the camcorder has a TBC there is IMO no advantage in adding ferther equipment into the chain.
Others many hold a different opinion.
But, again, samples of actual video with just the camcorder and with an ES15 provide more analysis than pure theory.
Your method(s) do, however, restrict you to DV which is a lossy format. Not as lossy as mpeg2 but still lossy. That means that when you edit and convert you will lose information from your captured video.
If you just use the ES15, which does act like a TBC, and capture analog through s-video with a lossless codec the initial captures will be larger than with DV but will be better quality. (and you can now use vdub/2 to it's potential) -
Copy that.
But, again, samples of actual video with just the camcorder and with an ES15 provide more analysis than pure theory.
Your method(s) do, however, restrict you to DV which is a lossy format. Not as lossy as mpeg2 but still lossy. That means that when you edit and convert you will lose information from your captured video.
If you just use the ES15, which does act like a TBC, and capture analog through s-video with a lossless codec the initial captures will be larger than with DV but will be better quality. (and you can now use vdub/2 to it's potential)
Thanks. -
Past my bed-time for a reply yesterday.
True uncompressed means that no codec has been used to create the digital video. You indeed saw that option in vdub/2. Files are quite large - 2 gb per minute typically. To use it, as you have now discovered, you require an analog source coming in to the PC. DV is digital.
Using an appropiate camcorder as a pass-through device has long been an accepted method to transfer analog tapes, typically VHS, to a PC and in the process create a digital version. The camcorder outputs DV so the PC merely records the incoming signal with no alteration to the source. DV is a legacy format - over 20 years old - and people sought other ways to capture analog. While capture devices have long existed - I acquired my first one in the late 1990s - captures, as you infer, were typically prone to time-base errors. The advantage using the camcorder for pass-though also made use, if available, of its built-in TBC.
Enter the non-documented 'discovery' that certain brands of Panasonic dvd-recorders, such as the ES10 and ES15, also had pass-through capabilities with the added bonus of some tbc-like features. Just as using nothing more than a capture device - I am not familiar with a Clearview - analog video is fed into the Panny and analog video comes out which is then fed to the capture device. A capture program, such as vdub/2, now takes that signal, which at this stage is uncompressed, uses a lossless codec - UTVideo is one such codec (I use Lagarith or Huffyuv) - to create the digital version.
To summarise:
1. VHS >> camcorder >> PC = DV (25 gb per hour)
2. VHS >> Panny >> camcorder >> PC = DV (25 gb per hour)
3. VHS >> Panny >> capture device >> PC + lossless codec = digital (typically 40-50 gb per hour)
I do not know the input/output capabilities of your Clear View. If it has firewire inputs and outputs then you still end up with DV as option 1. If it just has usb outputs your digital video is dependent on its output settings such as mpeg2 @ typically 8 gb per hour. -
I figured...
True uncompressed means that no codec has been used to create the digital video. You indeed saw that option in vdub/2. Files are quite large - 2 gb per minute typically. To use it, as you have now discovered, you require an analog source coming in to the PC. DV is digital.
Using an appropriate camcorder as a pass-through device has long been an accepted method to transfer analog tapes, typically VHS, to a PC and in the process create a digital version. The camcorder outputs DV so the PC merely records the incoming signal with no alteration to the source. DV is a legacy format - over 20 years old - and people sought other ways to capture analog. While capture devices have long existed - I acquired my first one in the late 1990s - captures, as you infer, were typically prone to time-base errors. The advantage using the camcorder for pass-though also made use, if available, of its built-in TBC.
When I look up analog to digital on Wikipedia, it looks like a fairly "easy" process, which leads me to believe that it doesn't really matter if you use a 10 dollar device or one for 1000? Kind of like Radio Controlled Radios/Transmitters. You can buy a Futaba for 3000 bucks or a Radiomaster for 500. The Radiomaster actually has more features than the Futaba. Sure, the Futaba has a way better build Quality, but I don't see that being an advantage when using a analog to video converter. I mean, how much quality difference can there be in one of those tiny chips!? But hey, I am not an electronics dude by all means.
Enter the non-documented 'discovery' that certain brands of Panasonic dvd-recorders, such as the ES10 and ES15, also had pass-through capabilities with the added bonus of some tbc-like features.
Just as using nothing more than a capture device - I am not familiar with a Clearview
- analog video is fed into the Panny and analog video comes out which is then fed to the capture device. A capture program, such as vdub/2, now takes that signal, which at this stage is uncompressed, uses a lossless codec - UTVideo is one such codec (I use Lagarith or Huffyuv) - to create the digital version.
That said, my Auvisio (ClearView) device has a SD card build in, so I cannot use any software like vdub to capture the footage. I guess that is the downside of it.
To summarise:
1. VHS >> camcorder >> PC = DV (25 gb per hour)
2. VHS >> Panny >> camcorder >> PC = DV (25 gb per hour)
3. VHS >> Panny >> capture device >> PC + lossless codec = digital (typically 40-50 gb per hour)
I do not know the input/output capabilities of your Clear View. If it has firewire inputs and outputs then you still end up with DV as option 1. If it just has usb outputs your digital video is dependent on its output settings such as mpeg2 @ typically 8 gb per hour.
Thanks bro, you are really helping me out here and I appreciate it. -
That 'ClearView' is also branded as 'Clear-Click'. Pretty much over-priced for what it does. Only 'advantge' = no PC required.
Ok. For clarity. DV is a special form of Digital Video with fixed qualities as you read in the report you posted earlier. Yes, a usb capture device does convert the analog signal to full-frame (720*576 for PAL) digital format uncompressed. Remember that DV is actually compressed.
Main reason why your 'stupid' - your word not mine - usb device no longer works would typically be down to drivers. Many such devices 'died' after WinXP. The one that I currently use is a Hauppauge USB-Live2 which has good driver support. Although I am still on Win7 it does work on Win8/10 and probably 11. You can read many topics on here and other devices are also well recc. -
Yeah, I realized that now.
What i should've/could've done is get a Blackmagic Video Assist. Sure, it is not the same price range, but it works pretty good when not wanting to use a PC. It has HDMI In so you could capture straight from the ES15, if you wanted to. But honestly, I don't remember anymore why I didn't want to use a PC and bought that "stupid" ClearView thing, ha ha.
Ok. For clarity. DV is a special form of Digital Video with fixed qualities as you read in the report you posted earlier. Yes, a usb capture device does convert the analog signal to full-frame (720*576 for PAL) digital format uncompressed. Remember that DV is actually compressed.
Main reason why your 'stupid' - your word not mine - usb device no longer works would typically be down to drivers. Many such devices 'died' after WinXP. The one that I currently use is a Hauppauge USB-Live2 which has good driver support. Although I am still on Win7 it does work on Win8/10 and probably 11.
You can read many topics on here and other devices are also well recc.
Thanks. -
It has HDMI In so you could capture straight from the ES15
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Enter the non-documented 'discovery' that certain brands of Panasonic dvd-recorders, such as the ES10 and ES15, also had pass-through capabilities with the added bonus of some tbc-like features
https://web.archive.org/web/20060411200718/https://panasonic.co.jp/pavc/global/diga/us...e_quality.htmlLast edited by Alwyn; 10th Apr 2023 at 09:55. Reason: Fixed link.
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Well we have all bought 'stupid' things in the past
As for what mediainfo reports I am somewhat worried. Ok. It is widely reported that mediainfo, at best, is not 100% accurate. Yet you have a PAL source @ 25 fps which, even if your device doubles the frame-rate should give you (even converting interlaced video to progressive which, technically doubles the frame-rate) 50 fps and not some random number which has no relevance to PAL sources.
But that device is converting on the fly so who knows what it is doing in the background.
But we drift from the original Q. Even a dvd-recorder with hdmi out is somewhat OT. I have one and would never consider that as a capture source. It was NEVER intended so but to connect to your tv and upscale in the process. -
Even a dvd-recorder with hdmi out is somewhat OT. I have one and would never consider that as a capture source. It was NEVER intended so but to connect to your tv and upscale in the process.
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I can keep the EX95 for as long as I like. Don't have the Blackmagic Video Assist yet, and I am not sure if I really need it. I am still working out all the VCR's, DVD burners and camcorders.
BTW, here is another thread of mine where I posted a bunch of sample video, in case someone is interested in that...
https://forum.videohelp.com/threads/409130-Here-is-my-Setup-What-do-you-think/page2
Thanks. -
It is VCR Refresh Copying. That is, copying from a VCR with a refresh. If anything, it is Refresh Copying, not VCR Refresh. The latter makes no sense, unless you mean a repair or just cleaning the VCR with a piece of cloth
BTW, DIGA is "Panasonic's nick-name for our DVD recorders. You may hear the word in our multimedia instructions. "DIGA" stands for "your Panasonic DVD recorder" in the movies."
I suppose, my VCR with a TBC, NR and a full frame store also could claim "refresh copying" capabilities, but it is too humble for that.
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