Importing Hi8 tapes to iMovie

What is the best method for taking Hi8 tapes and importing them to iMovie on m new MacBook?

I own one of the "hybrids" you speak of it is a sony trv520 digital8. our family had an old hi8, then we moved to this, to be able to still playback our old tapes. Sony only made the full analog/digital features in these models around 2000-2002 then it started disappearing. You can record in either Hi8 or D8 mode and the D8 systems encodes as DV codec with trouble free importing to things like final cut that i use. for Hi8 footage i have to use iMovie to import or a special setting in final cut as Hi8 does not have a timecode. sony still sells a digital8/hi8 vcr with firewire link and they just dropped the price:
http://www.sonystyle.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?catalogId=1055 1&storeId=10151&langId=-1&productId=11028832
otherwise people have used something like a canopus advc100 analog/digital converter, ive seen them on the net and at apple stores. or the dub method like forestman mentioned

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  • Problems with importing video tape into iMovie '08

    I'm using a canopus advc 110 to import video tapes from a vhs recorder into iMovie. BUT, the process often stops after only a few minutes when I still have a long way to go. I'd like to be able to leave it to work for 20-minute chunks (longer if possible, but I think that's about the limit), but it keeps stopping after a few minutes. When I come back in the room, it keeps trying to import (time in upper right corner keeps going) but had quit earlier according to time on the lower center of the iMovie screen. This is adding to my frustration and time, which is limited. Any suggestions??

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    iMovie 06 and iDVD 08/09 is a "lossless" combination.
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    Hi
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  • Can i turn off the Timecode, when importing a DV Tape into iMovie?

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