Analog Conversion

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  • 2nd Shepherd
    Junior Member
    Junior Member
    • Jan 2003
    • 4

    Analog Conversion

    I hate to look REALLY stupid, but all of this is new to me and I have a question. I have an 8mm analog camcorder. Is it possible to change this analog format to digital? If so, what is needed? Thanks.
  • Soulhunter
    Super Member
    Super Member
    • Mar 2004
    • 236

    #2
    Ehm, you really mean 8mm film...

    Or have you mixed it up with Hi8 tapes ???


    Bye


    Member of E.V.I.L. Corp. 2003 ® - Website in progress...

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    • setarip
      Retired
      • Dec 2001
      • 24955

      #3
      To Soulhunter

      "Ehm, you really mean 8mm film...
      Or have you mixed it up with Hi8 tapes ???"


      Analog camcorder = TAPE (8MM or Hi-8)

      Movie camera = FILM (8MM, 16MM, etc.)

      Comment

      • Soulhunter
        Super Member
        Super Member
        • Mar 2004
        • 236

        #4
        Whats a analog 8mm tape...


        Bye


        Member of E.V.I.L. Corp. 2003 ® - Website in progress...

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        • rsquirell
          Digital Video Master
          Digital Video Master
          • Feb 2003
          • 1329

          #5
          an analog camcorder captures on a mini 8mm VHS cassette tape. when you capture the tape on your pc u r converting it to "digital"....but at the same resolution of the original analog VHS tape. You cannot improve your source...but you can get an identical copy.
          Last edited by rsquirell; 12 Oct 2004, 12:31 AM.

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          • Soulhunter
            Super Member
            Super Member
            • Mar 2004
            • 236

            #6
            Only know Hi-8 and VHS-C...

            No matter, if its @ tape, you can capture it !!!


            - Plug the camcorder to the video-in of ya GC

            - Plug the camcorder to the audio-in of ya SC

            - Use VDub to capture it lossless -> Huffyuv or VBLE

            - Deinterlace, crop, denoise and resize the files

            - Normalize and filter the audio...

            - Encode this files to any format you want


            Read this capture guide and this FAQ !!!


            Bye
            Last edited by Soulhunter; 12 Oct 2004, 09:04 AM.


            Member of E.V.I.L. Corp. 2003 ® - Website in progress...

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            • 2nd Shepherd
              Junior Member
              Junior Member
              • Jan 2003
              • 4

              #7
              So rsquirell -- With the passing of time and a little more research, I have discovered that it is, indeed, an 8mm analog camcorder. Stupid questions #2 &3 : Which gives the better picture: analog or digital since digital must be converted to analog to be seen anyway? If the answer is digital, why? Thanks.

              Comment

              • rsquirell
                Digital Video Master
                Digital Video Master
                • Feb 2003
                • 1329

                #8
                Your camcorder is analog....the tape is made by an analog machine at analog clarity...what you see when you hook your camcorder up to a TV and view the tape is as good as it gets. When you capture on the PC, the capture is digital...but since the source is analog the clarity, although identical to the original tape, won't improve the video.

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                • 2nd Shepherd
                  Junior Member
                  Junior Member
                  • Jan 2003
                  • 4

                  #9
                  Yeah, but I guess what I meant is if I could record in either analog or digital, which would give the better quality picture in the end? And why?

                  Comment

                  • rsquirell
                    Digital Video Master
                    Digital Video Master
                    • Feb 2003
                    • 1329

                    #10
                    Good DV and DVD cameras capture the video with more pixcels per inch (or something like that) which means better clarity and larger files. But I've seen posters complaining that their DV results aren't any better than their old analog vidcam. I guess there's a range of quality (and price).

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                    • 2nd Shepherd
                      Junior Member
                      Junior Member
                      • Jan 2003
                      • 4

                      #11
                      I'm getting married at Xmas-time and want to videotape it. My analog takes good videos but I'm willing to put out a grand or so on a new DV camera if it is worth the change. I'm thinking about the Panasonic PV-GS400. If it were you, what would you do?

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                      • rsquirell
                        Digital Video Master
                        Digital Video Master
                        • Feb 2003
                        • 1329

                        #12
                        Without looking up the nomenclature of every digital camera in the universe I wouldn't know. Here's some general rules I would follow...(1) Buy from a local store with a good returns policy (ie. CircuitCity) so I could take it back if I was dissappointed, (2) look for utility and multiuse (ie. make sure it has analog input ports so I could convert my old VHS tapes), (3) check what kind and availability of media it uses and make sure it suitable for my intended purpose (mini DVD Discs and tapes usually store only 20 minutes of video) and (4) price. If I had a grand to burn, I'd check it out.

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