I've got some old VCR tapes that I want to transfer to computer. I "acquired" (was supposed to bin it) a video recorder and can now play the tapes. The VCR has RF and RCA (L-R-V)outputs so I can watch on TV. However, I can't see any way to record to computer. All the TV out connectors output what the TV is tuned to, not what it is displaying.
Is there a (cheap) device that will take RCA and convert to a format I can record? I have a (linux) box which will take RF in but it only recognizes digital signals not the old analogue signal. It also has RCA and HDMI but these appear to be output only.
This USB 2.0 capture card can capture HDMI video and HDMI audio at the same time, and can transmit audio and video signals to a computer or smartphone for preview and storage. Suitable for high-definition acquisition, teaching recording, medical imaging, etc. Support maximum input resolution up...
If you are concerned about no-name brands, I used a Hauppauge device in years gone by and it worked perfectly, so that's one out of the list that I would go for.
Do you have a pile of videotapes taking up space in your home? Or, do you want to archive your...
www.disablemycable.com
"Easy CAP" vs "Easier CAP", and the dongles both look identical...wouldn't worry though, since there's plenty of free capture software out there.
Just wondered what box you will be using this on, because the one you ordered says this:
"OS: Windows 2000, XP, Vista, WINDOWS 7 32 Bit, but not Win 7 64 bit "
I've got the exact same unit, works fine on Win10 64 bit. I've never actually used it yet, just tested it - I bought it because it was only £5 or so from AliExpress, and I've got some tapes 'somewhere'
I had the tapes but no player. Found a player in school that was to be scrapped so I scrapped it to my lounge. It's a Samsung and no remote to be found but a universal one worked. Will see if this unit will work on Win7-64 or Wine. If not I can easily install Win7-32 on my laptop. The requirements seem very old - CPU: Pentium III 800 above Required!!! May even work installed in "compatible" mode.
I had the tapes but no player. Found a player in school that was to be scrapped so I scrapped it to my lounge. It's a Samsung and no remote to be found but a universal one worked. Will see if this unit will work on Win7-64 or Wine. If not I can easily install Win7-32 on my laptop. The requirements seem very old - CPU: Pentium III 800 above Required!!! May even work installed in "compatible" mode.
Like I said, it works fine under Win10 64 bit - I've still got a couple of Sharp VCR's somewhere, a HiFi stereo one I used to use, and a mono one that was in my daughters bedroom (it's seen a LOT of Thomas The Tank Engine!).
Worth trying in compatibility mode, you never know.
I suspect the specs are low because it's old technology - no point in creating new technology when it wouldn't be any better, and VCR's are long dead.
During this COVID-19 lockdown, I transferred 15 years worth of my family's VHS tapes.
The way I did it, many years ago I had purchased a VHS + DVD recorder. I suddenly realized after reading the manual (yes, I was that much bored to find appealing to read old manuals) that I could copy the tapes into DVDs.
I know, I know........RTFM
So I first transferred them to DVD, and then on my computer played them and converted them to MP4 with the help of AnyVideoConverter share ware.
Sent them to my grownup kids, and saved them both at my hard drive and an external drive.
I'm so glad that I did, as shortly after I finished them, the equipment went kaput. Most likely is a mechanical function in the tape loading and transport, haven't figured it out yet.
I'm so glad that I did, as shortly after I finished them, the equipment went kaput. Most likely is a mechanical function in the tape loading and transport, haven't figured it out yet.