Forum Replies Created

  • Virginia Moser

    March 11, 2010 at 6:13 pm in reply to: VHS, Hi-8 and MiniDV PRESERVATION

    Hi Steve,

    I was very happy to see your post on “Creative Cow” after exhausting other channels in my search to find the best method to capture 80 hours of hi-8 footage with RCTC Time Code into Final Cut. I’ve given up on having the RCTC Time Code read by Final Cut and am now concerned with two things: getting the higest resolution image with the least wear and tear on my fragile hi-8 original tapes and avoiding audio drift on capturing and export. I’ve described the issue in some detail below, if you feel inclined to read it all. In short, what capture pre-set and audio sample rate setting would you recommend?

    I’d be very grateful to get any feedback you might have on this,

    Many Thanks,
    Virginia Moser

    I have 80 hours of original hi-8 video footage that I’m attempting to capture in FCP so I can do a fine-cut of a very important project from 15 years ago for distribution now. I am trying to get the highest resolution image with the least wear and tear on my fragile hi-8 original tapes and ideally, get FCP to read the RC Time Code that I recorded on to the audio track of my hi-8 originals after recording my footage. I made window-dubs of the hi-8 tapes using this RC Time Code onto ¾” tapes and have logged all the footage referencing this RC Time Code.

    Hardware:

    1. The original footage was shot on a SONY Hi8 camera with RC Time Code (RCTC) and DATA CODE function and Hi8 PCM Audio, Sample Rate of 32 kHz w/ 12-bit samples.

    2. SONY GV-D200 Digital 8 Deck w/ firewire to convert analog to digital. Menu Settings:

    I have the audio set to 16 Bit, not 12 Bit. HiFi Sound is set to “Stereo”

    Time Base Corrector is “ON”

    DNR is “ON”

    AV-DV Out is “ON”.

    3. Mac Pro, Dual-Core Intel Xeon, 2 x 2.66 GHz dual core processor

    Software:

    Final Cut Pro 5.1.4

    1. Capture Pre-Set:

    What capture pre-set would create the highest resolution picture and the fewest problems when outputting to DV tape?

    Should the capture pre-set in FCP be set to NTSC DV 48 kHz (3:2) 720×480 OR at NTSC DV 48 kHz (4:3) 640 x480? The 720×480 setting seemed to work except I got what looked like control track at the bottom of the captured image (this happened with both settings). 640 x480 didn’t seem to be the right one because I got an altered frame size and had to render the captured file when I put it on the timeline.

    I read that it’s preferable to use a codec such as DV or MJPEG/AVI with only I-Frames with a capture input set at Aja Kona LH:525.29.97 but I couldn’t find these settings and it was for burning to DVD, so it may not apply. I also read that “the quality of analogue tape footage is poorer than any full screen (704 or 720 by 480 or 576 pixels) digital format (resolution and signal to noise ratio). This means that we have to conserve as much as possible of the video data without further deterioration. It also means that going to extreme lengths, such as high definition or uncompressed video is a waste of time and resources; in fact, it may even exaggerate the blemishes of the analogue system.”

    2. Device Control: The only way I’ve been able to capture the footage is to use “capture now’’ with non-controllable deck setting and the RC time code doesn’t transfer. When I set the Device Control to Firewire NTSC I get a “waiting for timecode” message (probably because it can’t read the RCTC time code). Have you heard of “Hi8DateTime” software (https://octochron.com/)? It’s designed to allow you to read the RCTC time code though I don’t know if it works with a Macintosh.

    3. Audio Sample Rate: I tried setting it to 32 KHz, 8-bit in FCP and on my digital 8 deck to match the original hi-8 audio sample rate but it didn’t seem to work, though I may have been missing something. I read on-line that the 48kHZ setting should work, though it can drift out of sync if you capture entire tapes. The tape I captured today was in sync, but I captured it in a 15 minute and then a 45 minute segment. I’m concerned about audio drift at export.

  • Virginia Moser

    March 1, 2010 at 4:00 pm in reply to: Logging Information

    Hello Tyler,

    I am about to log, and possibly capture, in final cut 75 hours of Umatic Tape that I also have written logs for. The time code from the original hi-8 tapes the footage was shot on is burned on to the Umatic Tapes, so I also have that as a reference.

    I’d be very curious to hear how your logging has gone and whether you used a Canopus converter to capture the footage and convert it from analog to digital.

    Thanks very much, in advance,

    Virginia

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