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I have this videocamera and many family videos that were recorded using it. I was wondering if there is any way to convert these cassettes onto a dvd format.
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Is the VHS tape you are trying to record a commercial VHS tape (movie)? If so, it may have copy protection on it. The recorder is probably programmed to prevent you from making and using DVDs of commercial copy-protected VHS tapes.
you need an old fasion tape player and a program like magic audio cleaning lab or on pc program that will convert your tape (Analog ) to digital (MP3). Then just plug a lead from your tapplayer into the AUX of your computer and run the pc program which will load the cassttee on to a digital file. Then using the same program just burn the file to dvd as a mpg3 file.
The proper codec may not be loaded on your computer. Find the format your DVD recorder uses, Google for a codec for that format. Find a player that supports the code, download and install it onto your computer and then try the DVD.
Most Combo Recorders (VHS and DVD) will prevent you from
recording a Copyrighted VHS tape program onto DVD.
Try recording a TV program onto your VHS tape, then
transfer it to your DVD and see if your new DVD recording
will work or not.
I'm afraid, VHS tape have to be playback on standard speed for good picture and sound and dvd would also burn accordingly.
Noo way for fast dubbing because VHS tape video is analog signal that changed into digital signal in circuits to write on dvd disc.
I hope you understand how this dubbing works.
You have either used a disc that is not compatible with your dvd player, or used the wrong file system for the dvd and/or format, have not finalized the dvd recording. If you use a dvd-r for recording, the disc has to be finalized, regions use different formats of video(UK=PAL, USA=NTSC) The easiest way to use your disc would be to convert the video to avi format(xvid divx mp4/3) and burn to a disc as data format. Download ANY VIDEO CONVERTER FREE, and ASHAMPOO BURNING STUDIO6 FREE . Use the converter to change the video to avi, use the studio to burn the video as a data disc, you can get up to 14hours per standard dvd(28 hrs on a dual layer). Put the disc in and it will play as a DivX dvd.
You need either an NTSC DVD recorder (keep in mind that the US has 110 voltage, while Australia does not), or a computer card that supports NTSC. Some video capture cards support both NTSC and PAL (often switchable). Choose good quality, and pay attention to video/sound sync - some bad quality cards loose sync. Once the tapes are transferred to DVD - and keep it native NTSC all the way, they can be played on virtually any PAL DVD player/TV combo. With an NTSC source, it's best NOT to convert to PAL, while with a PAL source in the US, you'd need to convert to NTSC or only show the DVD on a computer (where NTSC/PAL doesn't matter).
we can convernt cassette to CD in the PC with good sound card I am using creative sould blaster or audio gy it is not expensive hardly in indian currence of Rs.18oo/- you can purchase from any computer shop. or go to creative site and see models.
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