Hello all,
It’s been over a decade, but a family member gave me a batch of tapes they would like digitized. My brain’s got a lot of rust.
My setup is:
A Windows 10 2019 LTSC build
1T NVME capture drive
10T storage server to move to after each capture is complete.
ATI 600 USB stick
AG-1980P deck (That I hope is still OK after all the inactivity. I am not qualified to tear it down and clean/lubricate)
Ambery TBC-1 (I know these get a bad rap, but it has worked flawlessly over a few hundred hours of tape for me in the past.)
I downloaded
Virtualdub and did a couple quick captures to make sure I remembered how to do all that.
A few questions come to mind.
1. In the intervening decade has
virtualdub added the ability to listen to audio without terribly dropping frames? (Without doing some form of hardware splitting to listen to it from another pathway)
I am starting with Lagarith encoded 720x480 VHS captures.
Although everyone watches these “on a TV”, they come from a source (PC, media player) that outputs progressive video, thus requiring deinterlacing instructions to be handed out to the consumers.
I am therefore going to distribute this batch in deinterlaced, lossy compressed format (probably H.264).
2. What is a good deinterlacing algorithm that does not have to be performed in realtime that I can apply to these (Yadif looks visually acceptable to me when done at playback on VLC polayer)
3. Does Virtualdub do the deinterlacing and compression or is that an avisynth job (or some other tool, I’m not familiar with avisynth either)
Thanks in advance.
PS: Thinking about distribution media, what kind of compression rates does one usually see with H.264?