Frage von Jens W.:Hello,
I am yesterday when an older rumsuchen to contribute to the rise in inter alia, that:
"you remember that very clearly when I directly with the computer of the camera recordings, ie without a band on record."
It is an Explorer Philips VKR-9500 SVHS camcorder. I'm interested in how I manage it, the picture directly without the "detour" on the tape recording to the PC. Is perhaps s.AV a quasi-Out from the chip signal to come? And how does the camera without the tape in record mode?
The quote comes from this post: http://www.slashcam.de/info/erhoehen-der-band-geschwindigkeit-bei-S-VHS-camcorder--192824.html
Thanks and regards,
Jens Witte
Antwort von thos-berlin:
It will definitely be given a detour - to the analog signal.
To my knowledge no analog recording provides amateur camcorder a digital output signal from the chip. "
However, if the direct analog output signal (CVBS or S-Video) to your Quallitätsanschprüchen enough (It's certainly better than on the tape-recorded), then you can with a grabber (cheap way) or an AD converter (actually the same high quality but ) "live" in the PC time.
Grabber usually walk into a heavily koprimertes format and is usually connected via USB, the AD-converter converts the signal into the high-mE DV and AVI format via Firewire (other names: IEEE1394, iLink) s.den PC.
The AD converter behaves like Iene DV Camera and can be with virtually any editing program to use. Grabbers are mostly on the software manufacturer of the vote and only run with it.
So if it should be, analog signals are digitally recorded, it would be my first choice AD converters (eg, video or data of Canopus)
Antwort von Jens W.:
Thanks for the answer!
The connection to the Calculator is clear. But how is this: The signal will land only on the tape is, so to speak and read out again and led s.den analog output - Or is the output
before writing head?
Gruß,
Jens Witte
Antwort von JMS Productions:
But how is this: The signal will land only on the tape is, so to speak and read out again and led s.den analog output - Or is the output before writing head? Without me now deart deep bets with camcorders, I would say:
I think it does not matter whether you have a tape loaded or not. On the AV-OUT output of your camcorder, there is always a signal. Vorrausgesetzt course, your camcorder is in camera mode and not in playback mode. If your PC has an analog input features (ie a very primitive way: Yellow Jack, Jack White, Red Jack (better expressed: Component Input)), then you will have free train. S.PC connect your camcorder and just record the signal. If your PC has no analog connections, then you will need, such as Thos Berlin mentioned above, a suitable internal or external hardware.
If you have a tape loaded, it will be recorded on the tape, as synonymous to your PC via your analog output. The fact that the signal from the analog output signal readout of the recorded tape to be, seems to me illogical and I can not imagine synonymous. I like myself but synonymous wrong. (I ask in which case correction) I believe that the signal, which analog output s.den and synonymous s.den write head to the occupation of the band that, from the chip itself.
If you are of course the recorded tape to play, it is now to the recorded tape signal.
Antwort von thos-berlin:
A "Behind Volume Control" (as in the old tape), there is no amateur equipment. The recording during a s.Output adjacent signal is therefore the signal auzzuzeichnende and not recorded.
It is the signal "before" the write head.
Antwort von Jens W.:
Thanks for the detailed answer - you have really helped. Now, I looked for my first time was, which I record ..
Gruß,
Jens Witte
Antwort von thos-berlin:
For example,
Analogue only in the PC, no analog out:
Canopus ADVC55
Analog In and Out (handy if you have a television monitor as a control wants to use)
Canopus ADVC110
Both are via Firewire s.den PC and then behave like a camera. This means that the use is with every cut-and Capture program, the video via firewire capture of a CameraLink can. Means synonymous, the recordings made in DV - Video format.