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Author Topic: Calling A TV/Video Techie!  (Read 9962 times)

Offline TR

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Re:Calling A TV/Video Techie!
« Reply #30 on: February 04, 2004, 23:26 »
::)

Quote

My man said Scarts all the way through as you will lose signal strength through coax, apart from that everything should be ok with HQ discs  ;)

Offline Sandra

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Re:Calling A TV/Video Techie!
« Reply #31 on: February 05, 2004, 00:07 »
I think that if I was rich enough and could find anything worth recording off the TV, then I would definately go for a dvd recorder with either a built in hard drive or ethernet to connect to the pc  :)

Offline Clive

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Re:Calling A TV/Video Techie!
« Reply #32 on: February 10, 2004, 23:03 »
Well I've learned a lot about my DVD recorder by now and I can make it do all the things I want it to.  I've done quite a lot of editing and found that it is completely seamless with none of those annoying gaps and stutters that I used to get with VCR editing.  The finalization process on a 2 hour recording in video mode took just 2 minutes.  Recording from one DVD to another is a cinch and I can't detect any loss in quality.  And the recordings play on my other DVD players too.

Offline Sandra

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Re:Calling A TV/Video Techie!
« Reply #33 on: February 10, 2004, 23:08 »
How many gigs does it take to record a one hour programme at best quality Clive ?

Offline Clive

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Re:Calling A TV/Video Techie!
« Reply #34 on: February 10, 2004, 23:18 »
The highest quality is "fine" and that gives one hour on a 4.7 gig disk.  I have been using SP which allows 2 hours.

Offline Sandra

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Re:Calling A TV/Video Techie!
« Reply #35 on: February 10, 2004, 23:21 »

Thats a big file size  :o
Is there a lot of difference between fine and SP ?

Offline Simon

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Re:Calling A TV/Video Techie!
« Reply #36 on: February 10, 2004, 23:27 »
It's not the same as using a PC, Sandra.  It really doesn't matter about file sizes.  You know you can get 2 hours high quality on a recordable DVD, and 3 hours good quality.  That's really all you need to know with these things.   ;)  I tried the 1 hour 'best' quality on mine, and I can't tell the difference between that and the 2 hour 'high' quality.  The 3 hour 'good' setting, is a very slightly softer picture, and you can notice a little digital 'noise' around some fast movement, but it's fine for everyday TV.
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Offline Clive

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Re:Calling A TV/Video Techie!
« Reply #37 on: February 10, 2004, 23:32 »
To be honest with you I've only used SP and LP so far and the LP is still very good.  One drawback with the system is that unlike VCR's, you can only erase entire blocks of a recording as opposed to say a 10 minute portion.  It's a bit like erasing a computer program - you have to erase it all.  Well I suppose that's not strictly true as you can erase individual files but you know what I'm getting at.  You can of course break a recording up into lots of chunks (e.g. stopping it at the adverts) and they could be erased individually.

Offline Simon

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Re:Calling A TV/Video Techie!
« Reply #38 on: February 10, 2004, 23:44 »
I think VR mode gives you more editing capabilities, Clive, but then you can't play it back on another player.   :-\
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Offline daveeb

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Re:Calling A TV/Video Techie!
« Reply #39 on: April 05, 2004, 18:23 »
I just got the panasonic E100 dvd/hdd recorder at richer sounds. fantastic machine at a good price but it had a fault so i took it back and i've now decided i can't really afford it.

the xp (best) mode fits 1 hour on disc and records at around 10mbps, footage from tv/stb looks identical to the original.  sp gives 2 hours and is virtually indistinguishable from the 1 hour. recordings from old tapes look better than the originals due to the time base corrector.  all in all i'm gutted i've had to take it back.
think i'll go for the E55 panny dvd recorder, should get that one through the budgets committee AKA mrsB.   :P

Offline Simon

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Re:Calling A TV/Video Techie!
« Reply #40 on: April 05, 2004, 18:34 »
Well, I've been more than happy with my Sony GX3.  The only occasional problems I have had were due to the STB crashing, not down to the DVDR.  I hardly use my VCR now.
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Offline Clive

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Re:Calling A TV/Video Techie!
« Reply #41 on: April 05, 2004, 18:40 »
What is this "VCR" you speak of Simon?

Offline Sandra

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Re:Calling A TV/Video Techie!
« Reply #42 on: April 05, 2004, 19:23 »


think i'll go for the E55 panny dvd recorder, should get that one through the budgets committee AKA mrsB.   :P


Dave, how fasts your pc ?
What have you got that you want to record, eg sat, digi terrestial or cable etc ?

You can save yourself a lot of money and have a better setup, if your PC is fast enough and just use a tv pci card.
They save to the hard drive in various formats, all seem to do at least mpeg2 for DVD quality, which you can burn to a CD or DVD to watch on your tvs dvd player

Offline daveeb

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Re:Calling A TV/Video Techie!
« Reply #43 on: April 06, 2004, 10:49 »
Thanks for ideas sandra but to be honest i prefer to have a stand alone box under the tv.  everything happens in real time and i dont have to lock myself away in my so called office for hours on end.  Also i don't have a dvd writer in the pc (which incidentally at 1Ghz is probably near the bottom of minimum spec). I've already tried vcd/svcd on pc versus stand alone box and the box won hands down both in terms of quality and convenience. When i'm up and running i'll probably consider editting pre-recorded footage on the pc tho'  ::)


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