Uploading Hi8 tapes to digital, gray lines in picture?
Hello, so I am new to this whole camcorder thing and I have a ton of tapes recorded of our family Christmas' and birthday's from when I was younger. I have the Canon ES8600A, if that makes a difference. I want to upload the tapes to digital to put them on a flash drive and or DVDs. I just have a few concerns / questions.
Every since tape we have plays and gray lines appear on the screen, when gray lines appear the audio cuts out. And this happens with all the tapes we have which is at least 20 tapes. Is this a problem with the tapes themselves or the camcorder? Will this appear on the videos when I upload them to digital? This is the 100% only reason I want them on digital. It is so annoying trying to watch old family videos when you can't hear it most of the time. Also, I have a tape that has a slight wrinkle, the wrinkle makes the gray lines even worse. However, the gray lines even appear on the non wrinkled tapes. How would the wrinkled tape be if I upload it to digital? Will it have errors? Is there an easy way to fix it without damaging the video? I'm sorry for all of the questions but I have been trying to research this stuff for hours and not finding many answers to my problems. And I would just like to know what to expect before spending money to transfer the videos. Thank you for any replies |
Hey! I'm not really an expert so what I say may need to be corrected by the "seniors" but I think it could be both from the tapes and the camcorder. I have old VHS-C tapes which were also used in camcorders which barely play and are black and white with almost no audio. So it can be caused by the age of the tapes but also from dirty video heads. On a VCR, cleaning them is simple but I don't have any idea on how to proceed with a camcorder. As for the digital version, it just copies the same video signal that your camera displays to digital. So any tape issues that appear when you plug your camcorder directly into the TV or on it's display (assuming it doesn't have a bad display/display cable) will appear on the digital version as well.
BTW I have a flawless Sony CCD-TRV69E Hi8 camcorder which has had no issues so far and I love it. |
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But having a camera is just part of the process. You need timebase corrections between the camera and capture card, otherwise you'll have dropped frames and quality issues. You can't just plug a camera into the computer, and expect quality results. And then a good capture card is also needed, and that means NOT getting a cheapo $10 to $30 item from eBay, Amazon, Best Buy, etc. Those are all based on EZcap/Easycap, referred to fondly as "easycraps". A quality card is about $75, and won't give you image degradation (loss of color, too bright, bad contrast, etc -- and your Hi8 probably isn't great to begin with, can't afford to make it worse). Also, the analog source is interlaced, leave it as such, especially for converting to DVD. Never deinterlace it, or at least not the master conversion. Make a 2nd copy for deinterlaced computer viewing. Quote:
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You "capture" video from analog to digital. Sometimes referred to as "transferrring" or "digitizing". At the professional level, it's referred to as "ingest". Never "upload", never "rip", etc - those terms refer to other things entirely. Quote:
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Also understand that VHS-C and Hi8 have little in common, in terms of tracking, as Video8/Hi8 have no tracking. The alignment data is recorded into the signal, unlike VHS/VHS-C. That extends to audio, tracking noise ("gray lines"), etc. * For the above non-tracking reason, it's ONLY the tape if the tapes were all recorded on a misaligned deck. But it's too early to assume that, and the camera is more likely at fault. The only way to verify this is by process of elimination, ie another camera or giving a tape to somebody like me that can analyze the situation with multiple cameras. Quote:
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The bits that guide the tape around the video head drum can often move, come loose or even worse fall out over in some cases. Seems to be a problem in general with 8mm camcorders. The camera can adjust itself to follow the magnetic tracks on the tape to a degree, but if the tape guides are too off, it fails and you get noise bars and the sound cuts out. It also risks damaging the tape. |
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