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I use this to record any replays that might've by some miracle remained intact without desynching in-game. It can be used to record while you play, but there is a bit of noticeable lag which will likely prevent players from playing at their best.
However, if one were to direct me to a product that splits one AV cable into 2 or more, I would be extremely grateful, for that may allow players to play on a TV without the lag.
Alternatively, if you have a strong enough computer, you could try recording footage from Dolphin as you play your matches on netplay. o3o
You can do this yourself if you're willing to monitor the recording and are even decently tech savvy.
Here is what I use: I get no benefit from your purchase of this btw.
Elgato Video Capture - Digitize Video for Mac, PC or iPad (USB 2.0) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA/ref=cm_sw_r_apan_i_KCK61WX6GTYAHY3Q5CY4?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
I'd check this out. I recently used it to copy a bunch of old home videos for my dad onto a digital format.
Elgato Video Capture - Digitize Video for Mac, PC or iPad (USB 2.0) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA/ref=cm_sw_r_awdo_A4J4E4Y9GSNK2KBK2BQJ
I’ve seen in an old thread that this cable is good but it does seem a bit expensive.
Get a good quality vhs video capture solution. Elgato Video Capture - Digitize Video for Mac, PC or iPad (USB 2.0) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA/ref=cm_sw_r_apan_glt_i_TB7HENR43QRBWKGJ8JVM And use your existing vhs player to play the tape and record it to the pc.
Alternatively you could use your player to convert it to DVD then use handbrake to rip the DVD to pc. But that will involve converting the video twice and will cause loss of video quality.
My preference would be to use the capture device but try and record it at 720p resolution and then crop the blurry edges and transcode it to hevc 720p/480p to save on space.
Not sure I sent the right link. This is the one I use and it's very popular. This one is cheaper.
Elgato Video Capture - Digitize Video for Mac, PC or iPad (USB 2.0) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA/ref=cm_sw_r_apan_glt_i_AYQ9730JMEFW94FRRSMZ?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
This is a very popular capture device. Easy hook up to a VHS deck. You'll need this and you'll need to get a VHS deck if you don't have one. Also check eBay and such as people sell these off once they finish their captures. Your VHS-C tapes might also need an adapter. Good luck.
Elgato Video Capture - Digitize Video for Mac, PC or iPad (USB 2.0) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA/ref=cm_sw_r_apan_glt_fabc_022GNK7BWBYB1B5Y5YME?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
Hi all, does anyone mind suggesting me a capture card for A/V input for backing up VHS tapes?
I am considering this Elgato, but reviews suggest it has issues with Windows 10: https://www.amazon.com/Elgato-Video-Capture-Digitize-iPad/dp/B0029U2YSA
dang that sucks. I had originally gotten one like the pic and it was horrible to use...I shelled out 85 for this one and dont regret it.
Im using this one.. honestly it seems pricey at $88 but ive digitized over 30 hours of home movies in the past week and its saved me so many headaches.. the software is super simple and it's paid itself already. I did have audio sync issues ONCE..but i was able to pinpoint the blame for that on my pc as i was using Premiere at that moment and i had messed with the settings...
You need an elgato video capture - easiest way to convert an analog signal to digital and works flawlessly for under $100.
Elgato Video Capture - Digitize Video for Mac, PC or iPad (USB 2.0) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_QGYASBZXX5SK2GNDJV9Y?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
I've been looking to convert some old VHS tapes to digital. I was going to go with the Elgato Video Capture device found on Amazon.
Any recommendations?
Is the elgato video capture good for this?
Link to elgato video capture: https://www.amazon.com/Elgato-Video-Capture-Digitize-iPad/dp/B0029U2YSA/ref=asc_df_B0029U2YSA/?tag=hyprod-20&linkCode=df0&hvadid=309751315916&hvpos=&hvnetw=g&hvrand=17291117316205293315&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvqmt=&hv...
You can get a usb video conector on amazon, and use that to record it to your computer. Then just burn DVDs.
You need hardware to convert the analog signal to digital. Amazon says this is the best selling device right now :https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_U_8AuKCbM1P5KW0
It clearly has an s-video connector, so as long as you have an s cable and some rca cables for audio, you should be set with just that.
We use a standard definition capture device from Elgato that's current $85 on Amazon. It supports analogue input (RCA with an option for S-video) and digital output (USB). Resolution: 640×480 (4:3) or 640×360 (16:9). We've used RCA for NES, SNES, N64, Gamecube and Wii.
Product: Elgato SD capture
(the software is a free download)
It's not a high resolution capture, but since you're sporting Wii-era and older consoles, they're not pushing out high resolutions anyway.
Let us know if you have any follow questions! :)
If you're looking for a device to capture vhs to your computer, I can't recommend the Elgato enough. It's half the price of its competitors because it doesn't have all the bells and whistle anyone can get with their pre-installed movie making software. It's probably one of my favorite pieces of hardware I've bought just based on its minimalist purpose and easy of use.
I've had good luck using this elgato device to copy VHS tapes to my computer: https://www.amazon.com/Elgato-Video-Capture-Digitize-iPad/dp/B0029U2YSA/
Someone else might have a better (or cheaper) suggestion, but this is the only thing I trust for my captures.
If you find a VHS, check out the Elgato VHS to digital converter
I found a ton of old home movies and used my old VHS to transfer the videos to my PC. It was really easy with this thing. I recommend getting a VHS with auto tracking though, it made it a lot easier and the quality much better.
This is the one I have and I capture using VirtualDub software. I think I had trouble using Elgato software to capture in the past. Premiere doesn’t detect the capture card :(
So I just did this for my parents two weeks ago. I bought a software on amazonfor $80 and was able to get videos transferred as video files on my computer. I am going to buy an external hard drive so I can transfer all the videos there (they take up lots of space as you can imagine).
I contacted Carolina Custom Video but they charge ~$25 for the first 30 mins of your video. I've already transferred 3 hours worth of video so this software has pretty much paid for itself.
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If you don't want to DIY, then I'd recommend Carolina Custom Video. While pricey, they were pretty responsive and seemed reliable.
I believe the Dreamcast uses composite. You can get this capture card and a composite splitter in order to send one video feed to your computer and then one to the TV.
Elgato Video Capture - Digitize Video for Mac, PC or iPad (USB 2.0) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_24C5Cb3MQTT0W
I used elgato to do mine and it worked great.
Try different USB ports preferably the ones on the motherboard. Mine wouldn't work in USB3 ports but my keyboard has a USB2 hub. Go figure.
I recently got this one for recording VHS home movies. Works great with a Mac.
https://www.amazon.com/Elgato-Video-Capture-analog-iPhone/dp/B0029U2YSA
TBH the $80 is completely worth it to me for easy h.264 output + no need to have a DVD recorder in the house.
A guy in our office has spent probably 6 months digitizing some old super 8 tapes on his camcorder using this:
Elgato Video Capture, Capture analog video for your Mac or PC, iPad and iPhone, white https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_hy7QAbC7PZKNW
Cheaper ones exist but he seems to like this one, it’s reliable and he likes the software it uses for capturing as well.
You would probably need to get a BNC to RCA adapter for the video.
If you want to do it yourself, this is what my BIL used to convert his childhood tapes.
Otherwise, there are services in every town now to do this...not sure how much per tape...maybe $25...wild guess.
From past use of their products, something like this might work for you - https://www.amazon.com/Elgato-Video-Capture-analog-iPhone/dp/B0029U2YSA/. I personally have not used this particular device.
A search for "Mac video capture" will come up with more devices. S-video/RCA input devices tend to run under $100, HDMI would be in the $125-150 or more range. There are devices in the $35 range, but they all appear to be for VHS recording, no idea if any allow watching live.
What do you use to convert your 8mm tapes?
I tried using this Elgato video capture device but the converted video has an audio lag that gets worse and worse the longer you record: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0029U2YSA/ref=oh_aui_search_detailpage?ie=UTF8&psc=1
This is what we've been using. I think we could try some post processing (sounds like kadano did some of that with his videos) to get rid of the interlacing but if not there are some other options in that post that I will definitely explore.
Edit: link didn't work
Generally I see these alongside a composite wire-splitter and two extra composite cables (one into the TV one into your computer). I use one of these with a powered splitter for my stream at home.
You'll need something like this: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_lf68ybVEEVHA7
That will let you plug your VCR into your computer where you can "record" the tapes into digital files which you can then upload to YouTube or burn to a CD
We are interested in seeing what we would need to improve our setup, whether or not that is a complete redesign. Cable channel is SD and I don't think they will be upgrading anytime soon. We are looking into getting a Video Capture device so we can plug into a computer during the meetings. I don't think this is an end-all solution though. Thanks for the advice!
I bought a converter on Amazon which you basically plug in either the s-video or component cables into the converter which goes into the USB. From there you can set the length of time you want to record (like 6 hours) and then it'll stop after the allotted time or you can do it manually in case you don't know exactly how long that the tape is. It shows the video on your monitor so you know exactly what you're recording. It was really easy with the one that I bought, I would reccomend it although it wasn't really cheap. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0029U2YSA?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o09_s00
I bought one of these to backup my old home movies to digital. It's not the cheapest or fanciest, but the software works well for basic use, and I can use it for other devices with composite video. I'm sure it's nowhere near "best practice" but was good enough for what I needed.
http://www.amazon.com/Elgato-Video-Capture-analog-iPhone/dp/B0029U2YSA
Thanks for the heads up. Unfortunitly I am at work right now with no access to YouTube, but will check out those two things when I get home...Thanks.
As far as the graphics, I have this Setup that my mom bought so I can record all of our old home videos from when I was a kid. I randomly thought about trying to set up the SNES to it, and that worked... is there a better cord to use? If so, can you link it, so I don't mess up with the wrong cord.
I really appriciate the feedback and will probably continue to post my videos on here, not for the karma, but for people like you that will give advice.
Thanks again!
Do you personally record/stream? What devices do you use?
It seems like a lot of effort and money to record 480p@60fps when you could just get something like this
for much cheaper and just get an interlacer and be done with it.
The shop near us charges $20 per tape... So I bought one of these:
https://www.amazon.com/Elgato-Video-Capture-analog-iPhone/dp/B0029U2YSA
It wasn't perfect, but it did a pretty good job!
You need an rca to USB capture card.
Something like this should work.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_imm_4F433S9GJ6G0PM4ZPAJM
https://www.amazon.ca/Elgato-Video-Capture-analog-iPhone/dp/B0029U2YSA and a VCR from value village.
I used to have an old video card and ripped some stuff like 15 years ago.
Probably the capture card then. Don't cheap out on that, its the most important link in the chain. Try this: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA It's probably more expensive, but Elgato has a relatively good name in video accessories.
Last time I did analog to digital Hauppauge was the brand to get, but I have no idea if they are still good or got lazy/complacent.
I converted a ton of VHS/VHS-C to digital last year—you just need a VCR, a computer and something like this. If you only have a handful, though, it might be cheaper/easier to just send them out—Kodak has a service, among others.
What kind of inputs do you have on your PC?
My initial thought (although not the only one) would be to find an RCA to usb input capture device. Similar to this --note it is standard def .
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https://nerdtechy.com/best-standard-usb-rca-s-video-capture
or
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Elgato has a lot of options for video capture, they are sometimes more expensive than their competitors, but their stuff seems to work (at least for me)
You could try re-recording it thru OBS, VLC or something similar once you can get it into your PC.
We're doing a pretty weird, high-volume method because we have hundreds of thousands of hours of tapes to do. That said, I think the simplest way to digitize personal Betas is probably to get a USB encoder made by El Gato or Hauppauge or such (one that supports composite inputs, since that's what your VCR will be outputting). We did some work using an El Gato Video Capture USB encoder (https://www.amazon.com/Elgato-Video-Capture-Digitize-iPad/dp/B0029U2YSA ) and it seemed to be very easy to use and produced good results. I think there are a lot more cheap options on the PC side or from other companies, but I don't know as much about those.
that shit aint cheap lol https://www.amazon.com/Elgato-Video-Capture-Digitize-iPad/dp/B0029U2YSA
Are you using this Elgato?
If so, you buy one of these and add it to your chain.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0096I2DNE/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o02_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
If you don't want to spend that much, grab and Easycap usb of some kind, they ignore Macrovision, but your quality won't be as good.
I had really good luck with this one from Elgato earlier this year.
Elgato as one usb to composite equipament: https://www.amazon.com/Elgato-Video-Capture-Digitize-iPad/dp/B0029U2YSA You can also find some splitters on Amazon (that do composite, RGB, component, S-Video,etc to HDMI)
My father passed away nearly 23 years ago and my mother passed away a little over a year ago.
We had a bunch of old home movies and videos on VHS that sat in storage for years and years that I never watched.
Several years ago we had a flood and thankfully I was able to save the majority of the tapes and transfer them to digital format and put them on my computer and on a backup flash drive.
Once I had easy access to them, I would watch them all the time, and my mom was still alive at this point.
Fast forward to after her passing. I still watch them a decent amount from time to time, definitely not quite as much. But I do still enjoy watching them. Although I find myself crying a lot and getting emotional when I do watch them, especially the parts with her in it.
I never got quite as emotional when I watched them before my mom passed away. I think because at that point my dad had been gone for so many years, nearly 2 decades. The emotional wounds weren't still fresh, so watching them really brought back a lot of happy memories. But now that both my parents are gone and my moms passing is still a fresh wound, it is certainly more difficult and a lot more emotional for me.
Also, if I could give a piece of advice. I'm assuming your old movies are on VHS or some other older format. Do yourself a favor and do what I did and transfer them to a digital format and make backups on flash drives just in case. You will thank yourself later.
I read that VHS will continue to degrade over time and has a shelf life for a point where it basically becomes unwatchable. I'm honestly kind of lucky that my basement flooded, otherwise who knows how long I would have let those VHS home movies sit and possibly get ruined. I would have been devastated if I had lose all those old home videos.
This is what I used to transfer the tapes to digital myself:
It's a little pricey, but if you have a lot of tapes it's still cheaper than hiring someone to do it for you. All you need is a VCR (preferably with auto tracking to make it easier and better quality) and a computer. It was really surprisingly easy to do.
You'll need a camcorder or a deck and a capturing device to digitize like this
Other than that you'll have to pay for the service.
I’d just get this (or one of its many much cheaper knock offs): https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_lqwLFbXWH5VBJ
You'll 100% need a piece of hardware to caputre the VHS tape.
Heres an amazon list - and thetop item an elgato capture device
I'd recommend searching this sub to see what other capture tools people have used.
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THEN, it's about editing software.
I use an Elgato which works well for what I'm doing. You can get one on Amazon if you are in the States, not sure if it's available elsewhere. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_RR0ZDbF1ADYHE
The one suggestion I would add is to please read the reviews carefully for these USB capture devices; all are not equal. Some work well and some don't.
This one has good reviews but it's a bit expensive:
Do some research on these before you buy one. Good luck!
1 this is the most sad post I've seen on here
2 concerning your thing plug this into a VHS player and you should be good
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here's a youtube video if you need help https://youtu.be/cyuJZpDo_4w
Generally you want to capture the tape losslessly and then re-encode it to a useful format.
I don't have the best setup, but not the worst either. My process thus far is using my JVC HR-S7500U hooked into a Hauppauge HVR-1250 capture card over S-Video. Capturing losslessly to Lagarith (BIG, hence 772 GB) using AmarecTV. I'd like to use VirtualDub, it works great for a lot of people, but I've had issues with it. Windows 10 has broken some directshow capture features on VirrualDub. I have a Windows 7 capture box I use now for all my media but I still have serious audio desync with VDub. A lot of people run into this problem and while there's fixes for some people, a lot just try AmarecTV and then it just works 🤷♂️. I think it's differences in capture hardware. Stuff works differently with different software and if you get a clean lossless capture there's no need to worry about what software you're using or not using.
I've been post processing the files using an Avisynth, QTGMC, and ffmpeg workflow that I found on this blog and corresponding set of videos. I choose to de-interlace the fields to 60 FPS and do a mild upscale to 720p with Spline64Resize for compatibility with YouTube (YouTube doesn't do SD 60fps). I sometimes use a mild amount of sharpening, but usually leave it alone. I just use x264 and AAC audio encoding. I use the grain optimization on x264 to avoid the compression filters that gum up the classic VHS noise. Turning this optimization off does decrease file size by a large amount. AAC encoding is done with ffmpeg's meh AAC but it's essentially transparent at the 256-320kbits I encode to.
Some people use Staxrip. I think you can use QTGMC and many of the other encoding things I've mentioned but with a simpler GUI workflow. I have never established a Staxrip workflow (just used to what I have now) but I've heard good things so give it some research if you're interested.
You can see a before/after of my VHS process with this video from an old religious high school. Before is when I just used a crappy DVD/VHS combo player with my Elgato (a decent USB capture device though) and then de-interlaced with Yadif and Handbrake. I've done captures of the same tapes with Elgato S-Video, Elgato Composite, and Hauppage S-Video with the same tape deck and post processing scripts. S-Video adds a small amount of noticeable detail compared to Composite and the Hauppage captured noticeably more highlight detail. This just might be different gain settings, but I liked the wider dynamic range in the Hauppage.
It's not perfect. I need a another different VHS player for variety because I've hit some old tapes that have serious transport problems with the JVC but work fine in my crappy VHS/DVD combo player. The player is showing signs of other odd issues, but it plays tapes consistently, although sometimes I notice quick streaking lines in the frames. I could find an older, better capture card and build a dedicated capture machine for that. A dedicated TBC would be nice for the extra/different correction it gives. Also a lot of things that I probably don't know about that I'm doing wrong, but I'm happy with the results so far given my investment in it. I'm definitely not as cool as the guy who posted the giant video rack Lol.
Weirdest thing I've found so far is probably this cat fighting Ninjas in 1994. Note that this is one of the tapes that had serious problems with it so there's no sound and it bugs out a few times.
Really enjoy digitizing old media, here's the project I did on book scanning if you haven't seen that before.
If it has s-video out then I’d use that as probably the best option. Elgato makes a reputable dongle for this, and Chinese ones are available for like $12.
Elgato Video Capture - Digitize Video for Mac, PC or iPad (USB 2.0) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA/
REDGO Video Audio VHS VCR USB Video Capture Card to DVD Converter Capture Card Adapter https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01E5ITE2W/
I see, in that case I would try this one.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA/ref=cm_sw_r_other_apa_i_PHIeEbJ7GF1PK
It's supposedly pretty good.
Or you can try the Startech USB3HDCAP which is a bit more pricy but very trusted.
I've read conflicting information on the El Gato video capture. Are you referring to this one? https://www.amazon.com/Elgato-Video-Capture-Digitize-iPad/dp/B0029U2YSA/
On the surface, it seems *perfect* for me, but I'd read conflicting evidence that it could be used for live-streaming. There are several other of these "composite to USB" recorders, but there seem to be debates about whether they'd actually work for streaming. Some folks have noted that either/both (a) OSB and other software won't process their feeds or (b) the resolution and screen dimensions can be off, resulting in a really small and hard-to see feed.
I'd love to be wrong of course, because these seem like by far the easiest solutions.
You want something like an elgato video capture:
https://www.amazon.com/Elgato-Video-Capture-Digitize-iPad/dp/B0029U2YSA?ref_=fsclp_pl_dp_1
This seems to be the only decent one on Amazon, but it's like $140 USD.
are these elgato video capture cards a good idea?
What do you think about this?
I don't personally own this,but this might be what you are wanting:
https://www.elgato.com/en/video-capture
Generated files can be synced with video capable iPads, iPods, iPhones and Apple TV and can be edited in iMovie or Windows Live Movie Maker without re-encoding.
​
Elgato and Apple go way back together
I just got one of these: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0029U2YSA/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o02_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
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A bit pricey for sure, but it's extremely simple and the digital videos are excellent quality. Plus, Amazon returns if you hate it.
I've been doing this for a few months on and off. I have two sets of tapes: VHS-C and Hi8. I started off with Hi8 since my mom still had the camcorder.
The Hi8 camera looks like this. And best of all, she kept all the cables with it. I initially purchased a cheap USB capture device (not the exact one, but looks similar) and it worked-ish. It was able to record with the provided software, but it would for whatever reason fail if left unattended. And it only worked on my PC which I game on.
So I decided to spend the money on something both Mac and PC compatible and purchased an Elgato capture device. This has worked beautifully.
Installed the software on my macbook, hooked up the cables, hit the record button, and it works great.
We use this for recording NES/SNES/N64/NGC/Wii
Here's some captured NES footage for reference.
EDIT: formatting
This has worked flawlessly for my VHS tapes. Worth every dollar.
To do it yourself, you'll need an analog capture device like this Elgato Video Capture (~$73 USD).
Or you can use a video conversion service like this one.. http://www.costcodvd.com
Thanks man! What do you think about this?
Elgato Video Capture, Capture analog video for your Mac or PC, iPad and iPhone, white https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0029U2YSA/ref=cm_sw_r_awd_1mbnwbF4JZJNJ
Hopefully this helps. Here is the adaptor they are talking about. Good luck!
Elgato Video Capture. Simple interface, works quite well. Note that if you don't have a fast processor or a dedicated GPU, the audio and video can get out of sync over time.
You probably could with something like this but it is more expensive than it's worth.
Don’t bother. Just get something that’s compatible with all computers for when you finally stop using that ~~security threat~~ G5.
Elgato Video Capture - Digitize Video for Mac, PC or iPad (USB 2.0)
This is what I used to use a decade ago when I used a G5 tower. Used it again a couple months ago with my 16-inch.