Video capture and nero

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • rane13
    Member
    Member
    • Apr 2005
    • 61

    Video capture and nero

    I just bought a video capture pci card but apparently the software sux that comes with it so I figured I would use one of nero's applications. But what is the best way to compress 10-12 hours of vhs footage to a dvd-r. Would it have to be in DIVX format? I don't think nero supports any compression except for recode but I can only use that on dvds right? Any help would be great!
    R.
    Holy Crap It Worked!
  • setarip
    Retired
    • Dec 2001
    • 24955

    #2
    Are you aware that (freeware) VirtualDub contains a capture program?

    Comment

    • reboot
      Digital Video Expert
      Digital Video Expert
      • Apr 2004
      • 695

      #3
      You can't capture directly into DivX (usually), unless the aspect ratio is very small, and bitrate is low.
      You would probably capture to Huffyuv or mjpeg, then re-encode to DivX for storage on DVDR.
      This works, providing your standalone player can play DivX files.
      If not, you'll have to re-encode the captures to mpeg-2 and author them as a true dvd.
      To get 10-12 hours per dvdr, you'll need some serious compression, and ultra-low bitrate, resulting in VHS quality, or worse.
      Try the KDVD Half D1 template in tmpgenc.
      My DVDLab (and other) Guides

      Comment

      • rane13
        Member
        Member
        • Apr 2005
        • 61

        #4
        @setarip
        I will look into that thanks.
        @reboot
        I have lots of vhs tapes with tv series on them I recorded from tv(thats redundant). Anyway most of them are 6 hours long I was confused and said 10 -12 hours long but actually they have 12 episodes on each one. Not 12 hours so that will be a lot easier I hope.
        Thanks R.
        Holy Crap It Worked!

        Comment

        • reboot
          Digital Video Expert
          Digital Video Expert
          • Apr 2004
          • 695

          #5
          Yes, you can fit 6 hours of VHS quality video onto one DVDR.
          I usually get 4 movies (using the full D1 KDVD template), author them in DVDLab Pro, and then just use DVDShrink to make it fit.
          If you want more than 6 hours, use the Half D1 template.
          My DVDLab (and other) Guides

          Comment

          Working...