View Full Version : Video capture card quality question
Dave
January 5th 07, 09:34 PM
I would like to transfer some old VCR tapes to DVD to preserve them.
However, I find the capture cards run from $39.95 to over $1,000. I'm sure
the latter are pretty good, but I'm really not looking for super quality.
Anybody have any experience/comments on the lower priced cards?
Appreciate any suggestions.
Dave
Cari \(MS-MVP\)
January 6th 07, 08:01 AM
S-Video is going to be better quality than composite, but of course you must
have a VCR capable of S-Video output... and the original tapes must be of
S-VHS quality and have been recorded in S-Video and in SP.
If you know the tapes are only ordinary VHS, and even more, if you know
there were recorded in EP or LP, there's not much point in buying the most
expensive capture card, you're not going to be able to improve the original
quality....
If you have a standard VCR, I would suggest something like the Hauppauge PVR
250 (www.hauppauge.com). Ensure you PC is up to capturing and editing and
encoding video, it's one of the most data intensive things you can ask it to
do. Instead of spending thousands of dollars on your capture card, ensure
your CPU is a recent and high end unit and you have enough RAM.
Bear in mind also that you'll be using a LOT of hard drive space.
--
Cari (MS-MVP)
Windows Technologies - Printing & Imaging
http://www.coribright.com/windows
"Dave" > wrote in message
...
>I would like to transfer some old VCR tapes to DVD to preserve them.
>However, I find the capture cards run from $39.95 to over $1,000. I'm sure
>the latter are pretty good, but I'm really not looking for super quality.
>
> Anybody have any experience/comments on the lower priced cards?
> Appreciate any suggestions.
>
> Dave
>
Dave
January 6th 07, 04:35 PM
Thank you Cari - I will do all of that. What kind of specs/RAM are we
talking about?
Dave
"Cari (MS-MVP)" > wrote in message
...
> S-Video is going to be better quality than composite, but of course you
> must have a VCR capable of S-Video output... and the original tapes must
> be of S-VHS quality and have been recorded in S-Video and in SP.
>
> If you know the tapes are only ordinary VHS, and even more, if you know
> there were recorded in EP or LP, there's not much point in buying the most
> expensive capture card, you're not going to be able to improve the
> original quality....
>
> If you have a standard VCR, I would suggest something like the Hauppauge
> PVR 250 (www.hauppauge.com). Ensure you PC is up to capturing and editing
> and encoding video, it's one of the most data intensive things you can ask
> it to do. Instead of spending thousands of dollars on your capture card,
> ensure your CPU is a recent and high end unit and you have enough RAM.
>
> Bear in mind also that you'll be using a LOT of hard drive space.
> --
> Cari (MS-MVP)
> Windows Technologies - Printing & Imaging
> http://www.coribright.com/windows
>
> "Dave" > wrote in message
> ...
>>I would like to transfer some old VCR tapes to DVD to preserve them.
>>However, I find the capture cards run from $39.95 to over $1,000. I'm
>>sure the latter are pretty good, but I'm really not looking for super
>>quality.
>>
>> Anybody have any experience/comments on the lower priced cards?
>> Appreciate any suggestions.
>>
>> Dave
>>
>
>
Kenneth J. Harris
January 6th 07, 06:00 PM
If you just want to transfer the tapes and not edit them, save yourself
some money and trouble and buy a free standing DVD recorder. Hook your
VCR outputs to the DVD inputs and you're go to go. Even better--get a
combo unit (DVR/VHS recorder). Put your tape in the VCR slot, a blank
DVD in the DVD slot and go! Both units are pretty inexpensive now.
Ken
Dave wrote:
> I would like to transfer some old VCR tapes to DVD to preserve them.
> However, I find the capture cards run from $39.95 to over $1,000. I'm sure
> the latter are pretty good, but I'm really not looking for super quality.
>
> Anybody have any experience/comments on the lower priced cards?
> Appreciate any suggestions.
>
> Dave
>
>
Dave
January 6th 07, 11:59 PM
Thanks Ken - that just might be the way for me to go. Don't really want to
edit anything.
And thanks everybody - much appreciated.
Dave
"Kenneth J. Harris" > wrote in message
...
> If you just want to transfer the tapes and not edit them, save yourself
> some money and trouble and buy a free standing DVD recorder. Hook your
> VCR outputs to the DVD inputs and you're go to go. Even better--get a
> combo unit (DVR/VHS recorder). Put your tape in the VCR slot, a blank DVD
> in the DVD slot and go! Both units are pretty inexpensive now.
>
> Ken
>
> Dave wrote:
>
>> I would like to transfer some old VCR tapes to DVD to preserve them.
>> However, I find the capture cards run from $39.95 to over $1,000. I'm
>> sure the latter are pretty good, but I'm really not looking for super
>> quality.
>>
>> Anybody have any experience/comments on the lower priced cards?
>> Appreciate any suggestions.
>>
>> Dave
vBulletin® v3.6.4, Copyright ©2000-2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.