Capture analog video

Hi, when i have a g5 with finalcut 5 i can capture analog video (betacam conected to a dvcam recorder then with a "non controlable device" and then "capture now") now, with the mac pro and fcp 6 i can't.
there are no signal to capture, what can i do?

The deck is in e/e if you can see the analog signal in the log and capture window. If you can't see it, it's probably not in e/e... keep looking, all pro decks have this function. The other thing you should be able to do is dub the source tape to the digital recorder. Make sure too the input selection on the machine is set up properly.
Jerry

Similar Messages

  • Unable to capture analog video.

    Hi,
    I am running Premier Pro CS3 on a Windows XP machine. This is a new machine to me provided by my work. I am trying to capture analog video from a VHS deck that has both S-video and composite outs. The IT folks installed an ATI TV Wonder HD 650 PCI Digital & Analog TV Tuner to use as a capture card. In the device manager it shows up as an ATI Radeon HD2400 card. I don't have anyway of discerning the difference, and this may or may not be the main issue. When I open Premier and try to capture, it does not recognize the card as a capture device. Any clues about how to make this work would be great.
    Thanks,
    sarah

    Premiere Pro does not natively capture from TV or graphics cards.
    You will find links to many
    free tutorials in the PremiereProPedia that will quickly show you how things are done in Premiere Pro.
    Cheers
    Eddie
    PremiereProPedia   (
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  • Changing color and contrast before capturing analog video?

    Is it possible to change color (colorcast / saturation and contrast etcetera) before capturing analog video in Final Cut (software)? I have some old dv tapes I would like to upscale to hd and are considering to upscale via the super vhs outlet / connector on the camera through an I/O box (maybe Matrox).
    Do you loose much quality when compared to capturing from DV (digital capture)? I would like to make "a first generation" good capture.....

    You would need a capture card and a deck with built in controls, or an external TBC that works with compatible decks. Not every deck allows for this external control.
    S-VHS or component out would be lesser quality than straight DV capture via firewire. Via firewire it is lossless...straight digital capture. analog capture is a loss of quality. Capture as DV and then upscale with After Effects or Compressor...or get a DV deck with SDI out and capture with...oh, the Mini doesn't do SDI. You'd need the MXO2 LE for best quality capture. With your options, the best bet would be capture as DV and then use Compressor. Or spring for the Matrox MXO2 LE.
    Sorry, good quality costs...
    Shane

  • Capturing Analog Video in iMovieHD

    Is there any technique or third-party software which will do optical scene detection on captured analog video? Or any way to break the input video into scenes using time increments? Both these options are available in a number of Windows environment video editing packages, but seem to be missing in the Apple Mac world.

    Is it on a tape you can read with your digital camera? If so import it from there. When I've done this I've used stop start and rewind to select more logical clips which can then be split in editing but iMovie HD will take the lot.

  • Best way to Capture Analog Video (via DV)

    I have no issues with capturing DV video froma DV Camcorder in PRE. The process is very smooth and I really am comfortable with it. However, when I am capturing my old wedding and other personal VHS tapes (via an ADTech Pyro AV) I really hate the capture capablities within PRE ( I am use PRE 7).
    I was wondering if there is any advantage to using PRE for the DV Capture for my Analog material verses using either Windows Import Video, or using some other capture program like Pinnacle Studio (which allows me to specifiy the length of the capture verses having it just run on until I stop it.) Most of my VHS tapes are 2 hours in length and I would like to be able to say capture 125 minutes then stop (so I could just run the captures at night or while I am otherwise not using the computer.) With PRE7 it will just continue capturing forever until I stop it, which creates some enormous files that then need to be trimmed.
    (Does anyone know a way to tell PRE to just capture for x amount of time on a analog to DV Capture?)
    Is a DV Capture the same regardless of program? Is there any advantage to actually running the capture through PRE7 verses external where I can provide better control over the length and time of the capture.

    If your ADS Pyro AV Link is set up right and capturing over FireWire, you should get the same quality no matter what program you use to capture -- and that quality should be as good as the original. Premiere Elements does nothing to change the video data of DV as it captures; it just saves it as it comes in.
    But I would not recommend using any program or device that captures as anything other than DV-AVIs. Otherwise you're dealing with conversion issues and possibly incompatible video files, etc.
    Does that answer your question?

  • Captured analog video, where does the actual captured file go?

    I am backing up old analog video 8 tapes to digital, using a Canopus ADVC-55 converter. The process is going just fine as far as I can tell, but I am sure I will have more questions as I get into this further. I am using FCP 6.04.
    As an initial test, I completed a Capture Now (non-controllable device selected) of a short 30 min. analog tape, using an older video 8 Sony Handicam, running through the Canopus interfacing with FCP. Primarily I want to run through all these old tapes (about 15 of them…) and back them up onto a dedicated Iomega external firewire drive, to retrieve for later use.
    Question du jour… Where the heck is the actual data file on the hard drive? Isn’t the file I see in the bin, from a result of the capture, just an alias pointing to the actual captured data file? The FCP document is only 24 KB, but I know the data file is much larger. I have searched the drive high and low but cannot locate it… Can anyone answer this? Also, I’ve read in discussions here about doing transfer to DV (I have a Canon digital camcorder I could use) rather than the hard drive… but if this is for backup purposes only, should that matter? And wouldn’t I lose a step of quality that way?

    I understand Kevan. For the time being, all I wanted to do was get these old 8 mm tapes backed up to digital format because I am afraid the tapes will degrade. They are about 12 years old. I also have some VHS cassettes that are much older that I plan to back up also.
    Eventually I would like to build some family movies and will use these files, but if you think I should be capturing into DV (I can use my Canon DV camcorder I guess) I will do that instead.
    Also, I will go ahead and define the folder so I can find the files more easily in the future.
    I sure appreciate that you are taking the time to answer these questions, thanks again.

  • Trouble capturing analog video using Quicktime 7 in Yosemite

    I am attempting to use Quicktime 7 Pro under Yosemite to convert old 8 mm or Hi8 analog videotapes to digital .mov files. The tapes are being played through a Sony TRV350 camcorder, which digitizes the analog video, and outputs digital video via the iLink (Firewire) output, which then goes to the Thunderbolt input on my MacBook Pro using an adapter. I start the camcorder and then start QT7 Pro.
    This DOES WORK - for a short while. After taking in 32MB of data or a minute (of a 90 minute video), QT7 stops capturing data with a message:
    "Recording stopped because the format of the source media changed. Media of different formats cannot be recorded to the same file"
    What does this mean and how do I get around it?
    PS: There are not many ways to convert these old tapes. Under Yosemite iMovie will no longer accept video from a Hi8 camcorder. There is some discussion of older iMovie HD but this does not work properly under Yosemite at all.
    Need to digitize these old family tapes - any help will be appreciated

    One tiny wrinkle is that "Save" from Vidi gives an error message but "Save as" works fine. I suspect Vidi may also stop working with the next OS X release.
    Since you did not indicate the specific nature of the error message, I don't know if this is a "fixable" problem or not. The difference between the "Save/Record" and "Save As.../Record As..." options is that the former automatically stored the captured files in a designated location using a default filename. You may wish to check or reset the preference settings here to see they are causing your issue.
    Yes, the conversion of a 90 min tape does give a 21 GB file but I don't care - these family videos are irreplaceable and storage is cheap.
    This sounds about right—i.e, the normal average DV-25/DVCPRO-25 total data rate is on the order of 28.5 Mbps (or about 13 GB/hour) with DV-50/DVCPRO-50 about 57 Mbps and DV-100/HDV about 114 Mbps.
    One more question. Now that I have a DV file, what can I use to convert to a more compressed format that preserves quality? QT7 to save as H.264 is best? Or something else? Toast?
    This normally depends on your goals and personal workflow preferences.
    For instance, if you are editing content (i.e., trimming; merging; adding titles, fades, transitions, effects, etc.), I would normally use the export/share options that are available from within the editing app itself. On the other hand, for simple trims and export/share of files, I would normally use QT X or QT 7 Pro depending on the specific project needs and/or level of manual control desired. For totally edit-free conversions, I would normally use the encoder options now built into Yosemite (or Mavericks) operating system at the Finder level or the free HandBrake app. (The former basically employs a non-anamorphic approach with high/low quality or target device controlled quality options while the latter has a better graphic user interface for anamorphic strategies with more manual control for truly customized exports as needed.)
    EXAMPLE 1: The family normal has Thanksgiving at my brother-in-laws home in PA so my son hosts a second "pseudo-Thanksgiving" dinner on January 1st for the relatives here in NJ. This year I wore a GoPro and within minutes of returning home created the following "trailer" of the gathering (with a total absence of any real planning or forethought) using iMovie to shared the file directly to Mail for posting to others. In this case, I used the video editor to both edit and share a "quickie" video with the rest of our relatives from the East to West Coast. I.e., it seemed the most efficient workflow for the mini-project... SAMPLE VIDEO
    EXAMPLE 2: On the other hand, several yeas ago I was asked to post a "quickie" tutorial showing how to layer audio and video content. As this was a relatively simple project, I used QT 7 Pro for this project. Here is the resulting SAMPLE FILE created while making the tutorial.
    EXAMPLE 3: In cases where the quality of the source file varies drastically—one video being an 80 year old cinema classic and the next a just released blockbuster loaded with special effects—and/or the source files are not "natively" compatible with QT, I prefer HandBrake for its ability to "tweak" settings over a wide range to create "universal" playback files for all mobile devices, local network streaming, and sharing via internet... SAMPLE 1959 TRAILER
    EXAMPLE 4: Lastly, when I simply want to just transcode one or more QT compatible files (for any number of reasons) at the Finder level without having to open a dedicated converter utility, I simply select/highlight the files in the Finder and pass them to the Yosemite/Mavericks operating system for conversion... POCKET RECORDER SAMPLE FILE
    As you can see, you have a myriad of options to choose from depending on your personal preferences, needs, goals, etc. As to H.24/X.264/MPEG-4 AVC, yes I would recommend sticking with any encoder that adheres to the JVT standard since it has become a default Mac system standard and, with different settings, is extremely scaleable with regard to use—i.e., it can handle anything from cellular streaming to Blu-ray or multi-K Hi-Def resolutions. However, for all-purpose use, I stick to High Profile (current mobile, TV, High-Speed Internet compatible) or Main Profile (older mobile device, original TV, lower-speed platform compatible) anamorphic encodes at level 3.1 which nicely covers data rates from less then 100 Kbps up to 14 Mbps or anything most users will ever need.

  • Capture analog video audio for MacBook

    Is there an inexpensive way to get analog video and audio in/out using my MacBook? I'll be using Final Cut Pro 5.1 Studio to edit. Most of my media will be from my BetaCam SX camera. I will be exporting to DVD, Beta and who knows what for broadcast and internet. Thanks for the help. Gary
    MacBook    
    MacBook    

    The cheapest viable choice you have is to go DV-rez for your project. All you'll need is a Firewire breakout box such as a Canopus, Pyro AV, or other similar box - they usually cost around the $200 mark.

  • 5600 - No Sound when trying to capture analog video

    Hi all, hope someone can help me on this one cause i have no clue here...
    I try to capure from my analog camcorder, but I have no sound when connect the  RCA or S-video video cable. The moment i disconnect the video cable the sound come back ....  
    I can capture audio without video or capture video without audio, but not at the same time !
    Any feed back will be greatly appreciated.. thx in advance..

    Well before someone could answer me i found a post here very similar to my problem....
    https://forum-en.msi.com/index.php?threadid=27065&sid=&hilight=faulty+rca
    Decided to test and the guilty was my rca cable...got a knew one and everything is just fine...
    Hope this help someone else someday .. thx u all

  • Bad audio connection on P-35 Platinum moBo, while capturing analog video?

    Before I give up, I'm reaching out to MSI and any persons suffering from out-of-sync audio and video capture issues while using Pinnacle Studio Video editing software. Studio Ultimate HD v.14.
    I've posted numerous inquiries to the Pinnacle Support team, the Pinnacle Forum site, as well as the GrassValley (Canopus 110 or 300, I was thinking about trying that) and really never got anywhere.
    A few people had mentioned maybe the sync issue could be caused by a bad analog signal and it will drop video or audio frames hence the sync problem. Bringing the video into the capture mode in Studio is fine, but the audio has about a 6 second latency delay, which never recovers.
    Could it be the REALTEK HD Sound Audio on my P-35 MoBo, maybe bad? I play music, and everything else coming out of my speakers sound fine, it's just the syncing issues with a PCI device that never locks in both the Video with the audio, because there are two different incoming devices.  Analog camera video-out to PCI Video-IN, and audio out from analog camera to onboard, MoBo Realtek audio input.
    The PCI-500 capture that originally came with my first Studio product (Studio movieboard 12.1) has NO Audio RCA input, only FireWire, S-video, and Video IN and OUT)
    P-35 Platinum MS-7345 Mobo
    Windows XP  Home Edition SP3
    Intel Core 2 Quad CPU  Q6600 @ 2.40GHz (4 CPUs)
    2.4 GHz, 3328 MB Physical RAM
    NVIDIA GeForce 8600GT  512 Memory Size
    Realtek HD Audio Output Sound
    DirectX version: 9.0c
    Monitor: Viewsonic VX2035wm Series
    WD 500 GB HDD / WD 74GB RAPTOR HDD
    Pinnacle PCI-500 Capture card
    Nero9
    I use the MSI Live Update 4 to update drivers, BIOS, VGA,and Utilities. This system is about four years old.  I'm just afraid to flash or update BIOS, thinking I could screw things up.
    So I guess  my question here is to ask, if maybe the audio input jack on my P-35 Mobo could be defective?  Thank you!

    Have you try out with a standalone add on sound card? Sometimes, sync problem can be due to processing power or RAM space needed for rendering and merging.

  • Capturing analog video

    I'm using a Formac Studio DV video capture device to import analog VHS tape into my I.Mac with iMovie 4.0.1. The picture comes in fine but there is a terrible loud staccato noise in playback that blocks out all sound on the tape. What is going on? I've been told that this doesn't happen if using earlier versions of iMovie or even Final Cut Pro. Does this make sense? John

    John:
    I had this identical problem with my Formac Studio TVR about 2 years ago. I sent the Formac to the California location, and I think they installed a new chip plus firmware. Now it works fine. Check out to see if you have these specs:
    Preferences: TV/FM Tuner, Firmware 1.0.7
    Operating software: Studio TVR 3.2.0
    Thanks,
    -- Bob Ayres

  • PE7 - capturing analog video (VHS/Analogue video camcorder)

    I'm a complete novice, so please excuse my ignorance on this subject.
    Re the subject heading - To quote from the Help System:
    1. To use video from analog sources in your Adobe Premiere Elements project, you must first convert (digitize) the footage to digital data, because Adobe Premiere Elements only accepts direct input from digital sources.
    2. Use an AV DV converter to bridge the connection between your analog source and the computer. Connect the analog source to the converter and connect the converter to your computer. Adobe Premiere Elements then captures the digitized footage.
    OK as far as it goes.
    In my case I intend to use the Canopus ADVC300 as the digital video converter. The connections to this from analog devices (VHS/Analogue camera) and to the PC (via Firewire) appear straightforward.
    In PE7 when starting a new project one has to choose from the following input sources - DV Camcorder; DVD (Camcorder or PCDVD Drive); Digital Still Camera; Webcam or WDM Device; HDV Camcorder; AVCHD or other hard disk/memory camcorder; Mobile phone & players; PC Files & Folders.
    As far as I can tell there appears to be no means of selecting digitally converted analogue video, which is where I came in.
    Perhaps the digitised analogue stream from the ADVC300 is saved to a file, in which case one would select 'PC Files & Folders'. Is this what is meant by 'Adobe Premiere Elements then captures the digitized footage'?
    I would appreciate any advice on this subject. Responses from experienced ADVC300 users would be especially welcome.
    Regards
    Leonard

    You want to load these files from PC Files and Folders, Leonard. Just browse to them.
    You could also simply capture directly into your project using your DV bridge (the Canopus). Here's more information on capturing analogue, from the FAQs at the top of this forum.
    http://www.adobeforums.com/webx/.3bb95e46
    By the way, if you're interested in more detailed information on capturing video as well as more detailed information on all of the tools in this program and how to use them, you may want to look into "The Muvipix.com Guide to Premiere Elements 7," written by that esteemed expert Steve Grisetti, who hosts this forum, co-founded http://www.muvipix.com as a site for supporting amateur and semi-professional videomakers and has written over 160 of the FAQs at the top of this forum.
    It's available at Amazon.com or through the Muvipix.com store:
    http://astore.amazon.com/chuckengelsco-20/detail/0615248993/104-3709942-5611121

  • Problem capturing analog video from camera

    i'm using FCP X version 10, trying to capture some hi-8 video from my camcorder through a hardware device called Dazzle* Hollywood DV Bridge.
    when i open the Camera Import window, the analog footage displays successfully. however when Import, Stop Import, and Close, the footage does not appear as a Clip in my Event. It seems that the footage was not captured.
    i experimented with capturing some footage in the Camera Import from Apple Built-in iSight. i followed the same steps as I did above, for the analog. with the iSight, however, the footage is successfully captures. it displays as a Clip in my Event.
    why is FCP X capturing my iSight footage but not my Dazzle footage?

    I'd kinda doubt FCPX supports that capture device. I'd suggest using the Dazzle's software to capture your footage instead and then drag the results into an event.

  • Capturing Analog Video Direct To Mac

    Hey dudes - I hope you are all well and having a good holiday weekend
    I have some shows on a REPLAY-TV box and a TIVO box that I would like to get onto my Mac
    The outputs are S-Video and RCA audio --- I would normally record these shows to a MiniDV tape, but I don't have my deck with me, and I'm trying to digitize them soon
    With that said --- is there a hardware solution out there, that would allow me to plug my Replay and TIVO into my PowerBook, and capture shows directly off of the analog signal? I'm happy to purchase any extra hardware that's necessary - I just want to be pointed in the right direction
    thank you all!!!

    A Canopus product such as the ADVC110 would work.
    Analog in, FIrewire out to the Mac.
    http://www.canopus.com/products/ADVC110/index.php

  • Capturing Analog video using Sony DSR 11

    I have old footage on VHS that I need to capture into FCP. I've done this a bunch of times using a DSR 20 and I'm assuming it works the same way with the DSR 11. When I do this with the DSR 20, I plug the VHS deck into the deck, switch the input to S video (I'm using s video cables) and in FCP, I switch the device control to "Non contrable device" and use the DV NTSC capture preset. I did the same thing using the DSR 11 but I don't get any video. I'm sure there is an obvious step that i'm overlooking but I just can't see what it is.

    We do this often with our dsr11s, not problem. Could be a bad s cable, always start with the simplest things first. Then try using composite video.
    Umm, I'm not at my video machine today but you might need to make a menu setting adjustment on the dsr to feed straight through. Without the E-to-E active, you might need a tape in the machine or to activate the record button.
    bogiesan

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