---------------
Chippy569 Goldmember 1,851 posts Likes: 1 Joined Dec 2010 Location: Minneapolis, MN More info | Jan 30, 2011 09:54 | #2 basman007 wrote in post #11741795 Hello everyone! I'm new to making/editing video and I'm in need of your help. I've got alot of old tapes ranging back about 80 years. Most of them are in storage, so I don't exactly know what kind of format they are. The ones I've got with me are about 30 Digital8 and miniDV tapes from the last 10 years. I've also got a few VHS tapes. I want to make a digital (lossless) copy of all the tapes to act as a backup and I want to edit them and burn them on a dvd for the whole family to enjoy. Now, all I've got are the tapes; I don't have any old cameras (just a digital one) or cables, etc. What is the best way to handle this? Is there a device that plays different format tapes? Or should I get a 2nd hand camera from ebay (although I noticed these old cameras aren't as cheap as I thought) to get the tapes on my pc without loss of quality? What other hardware or software do I need? Thanks in advance ![]() Honestly, to get all the different players you're going to need, it's probably going to be cheaper to find a company in your area that offers this kind of service -- there should be someone near you, just look up film digitizing or whatever in google in your area. Gear List
LOG IN TO REPLY |
MikeFairbanks Cream of the Crop 6,428 posts Likes: 2 Joined Jun 2009 More info | Jan 30, 2011 10:03 | #3 If you go to Bestbuy you can buy a device that will hook up to your vcr or camcorder and you can then feed the films into your laptop or computer. It's about fifty bucks. They have it, even if the salespeople say they don't. Look at the link below, and occasionally the product changes, but essentially you simply plug the vcr into the device (through standard av plugs) and the device plugs into the USB port on the computer, click a few times, and bring the videos across. You can save them in any format you want (most use avi.). You can even plug the camcorder into the device and transfer movies that way. Thank you.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
hawkeye60 Goldmember 2,079 posts Likes: 11 Joined Aug 2008 Location: Mesa, Arizona More info | Jan 30, 2011 11:13 | #4 If you have a lot of tapes to convert and want a really good convertor, check out Canopus: http://www.bhphotovideo.com …onal_Media_Converter.html It's a lens not a lense!
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Chippy569 Goldmember 1,851 posts Likes: 1 Joined Dec 2010 Location: Minneapolis, MN More info | Jan 30, 2011 11:32 | #5 hawkeye60 wrote in post #11742476 If you have a lot of tapes to convert and want a really good convertor, check out Canopus: http://www.bhphotovideo.com …onal_Media_Converter.html I have one of these and it works perfectly, never a single dropped frame, unlike others I've tried. I've tried cheaper ones and found them to be a waste of time and money and do a poor job overall. Sometimes you do get what you pay for. something like that is nice but only works on the DV tape. He'd have to buy another converter for his super8, and yet another for VHS, etc. -- which is why I recommend finding a service that does the converting. Gear List
LOG IN TO REPLY |
MarKap77 Senior Member 806 posts Likes: 2 Joined Aug 2006 Location: Indianapolis More info | Basman, Mark
LOG IN TO REPLY |
hawkeye60 Goldmember 2,079 posts Likes: 11 Joined Aug 2008 Location: Mesa, Arizona More info | Feb 02, 2011 12:03 | #8 Chippy569 wrote in post #11742575 something like that is nice but only works on the DV tape. He'd have to buy another converter for his super8, and yet another for VHS, etc. -- which is why I recommend finding a service that does the converting. No it works all. I used it mainly for my old VHS tapes. It's a lens not a lense!
LOG IN TO REPLY |
MarKap77 Senior Member 806 posts Likes: 2 Joined Aug 2006 Location: Indianapolis More info | Feb 03, 2011 22:07 | #9 basman007 wrote in post #11750096 I think the majority of the videos are on hi8 and digital8 tapes. They can be played be the same camera, right? Perhaps I can get a 2nd hand camera for those and just connect it directly to my pc... What about the heads in 2nd hand cameras? If they're old will that result in less quality? Would it be a big difference? I originally had a Sony 8mm analog video camera (actually, I had an old Sony Beta video camera, but that is a whole other story). Once I upgraded to a digital8 Sony camera, I was able to digitize my old 8mm analog videos by just playing them in my new digital camera connected to my computer via firewire. The quality was not the best, but they were still pretty good. Mark
LOG IN TO REPLY |
![]() | x 1600 |
| y 1600 |
| Log in Not a member yet?
Register to forums
Registered members may log in to forums and access all the features: full search, image upload, follow forums, own gear list and ratings, likes, more forums, private messaging, thread follow, notifications, own gallery, all settings, view hosted photos, own reviews, see more and do more... and all is free. Don't be a stranger - register now and start posting!
|
| ||
| Latest registered member is ANebinger 1350 guests, 179 members online Simultaneous users record so far is 15,144, that happened on Nov 22, 2018 | |||