When someone says to me that DVDs and Blu-rays are obsolete, I always say Netflix took down Inuyasha because their licence expired. This can happen with everything
I was jumping for joy when I saw that an Anime I wanted to rewatch from the 90's was on Amazon Prime. I started watching it, finally managing to understand it (in the 90's I didn't quite get all of it). 3 episodes in, they took it down. I bought the DVD instead.
Having a dvd collection is too big of a hassle nowadays, I prefer having a nas with video files + jellyfin so that I have my media library organized nearly
@@ConsumerDV Torrent is blocked in the UK. I haven't heard of anyone using it for years, it's dead here. Yes, you could use a VPN but I work in IT so know how far I trust a VPN that isn't my own.
All of those recordings are precious. I always look at the date and think about how old I was and where I was at the time. I also think about those people and what might have happened to them.
I bought one of these on Facebook to transfer my old home movies from vhs to dvd, and I have to say this machine is fantastic! For about half a year I offered a service to locals in my area to transfer their tapes to dvd for $5 a piece. I had people bringing me 20-30 tapes at a time! It was great! but it was so time consuming. I had to watch the video almost all the time to make sure it wasn't just recording a blank screen or someone's tv recording from 20 years ago. I wasn't doing it for the money, I learned a lot along the way and helped many people save their memories for future generations. I also picked up a quick copier on eBay, to make duplicates for people who wanted multiple copies. I still have both machines and two rather good vhs players that I will continue to use and cherish.
You can easily get even CD-Rs in Staples, Amazon, etc. DVD is nowhere near obsolete - organizations wanting to push it out in favour of streaming are wanting you to swallow and accept the "you won't own anything and be happy." As far as digitizing tape, I use an ATI capture card on an old XP rig. I made enough money doing that in college and uni ;)
They're "obsolete" in the sense that Blu Rays and even UHD discs are a thing, and they're (obviously) much higher quality. But yeah, DVDs are still sold and stuff. They're like 480p, though, heh.
Just today, a video game publisher disabled the video game people paid up to $60 for because it wasn't making them enough money. Thankfully with physical media, the game publisher can't come into my home and take my purchase away. Same with video and audio content. The only reason why they're doing this is for control, paywalling and greater profit at our expense. I'm now even seeing the same model being applied to physical goods where you pay for a licence and pay again an ongoing subscription fee to use that product that can be revoked at any time and incorporate planned obsolescence by design.
Nah, physical media's not obsolete, that's just the streaming services telling us that, cos they would rather we hand over money for something we can't keep... :P
and they will have control over what you watch. I have a Roku and most of the free films are total trash (to me) I will also not subscribe to any pay service. I prefer films made over 40 years ago.
I can’t thank you enough for this video. I had transferred old home movies on cheap software a few years ago and the quality wasn’t good, but at least they were preserved was my mentality. I saw this video and it actually motivated me enough to find one(I actually got the next model up without the s video) and start the whole process over again.
I used to transfer DV video to DVD recorder and the quality is way better than PC capture card. I can say this one is also a DVD recorder but it's SO COOL.
I bought one of these at work for transferring MiniDV tapes, since I liked going directly from digital DV to digital DVD, without analog steps in the middle. The built-in screen was a bonus so I didn't need a separate TV setup. I could just start the recording and come back later when it finished. In addition to the later VRD-MC6 mentioned in the video, there's also the earlier VRD-MC1 and VRD-MC3 recorders, but I think the VRD-MC5 had some advantage over them, which I can no longer recall. It may be I just wanted a new one, and the VRD-MC5 was the cheapest one I could find new. One feature not mentioned is if you don't have a DVD-ROM drive, you can use a standard USB B cable to plug the VRD-MC5 into your laptop/PC, and it will operate like an external PC DVD-ROM burner. So you can rip discs using it, or even burn other content from your computer using it. The card readers also showed up on the PC, so you can use it as a card reader.
7:42 - translation for those who need it - (Go ahead) Yellow, (Go ahead) silver, (Go ahead) and white and- (no, [just] white!) (Go ahead) white and all the colors on the Z350 sports car! ([unintelligible]) Or I’ll stay- [she complains here] - (Go ahead) white and all the colors on this sporty Z350! - (Go ahead) XTerras for adventurers* like you! *gendered M/F (I really wonder how you got this clip, this place looks oddly familiar… LA?)
Man, CCD footage looks so smooth and rock solid. And yeah, DVDs are still sold, I always laugh when people claim that DVDs are obsolete, sites like DMM still sell lots of DVDs of the adult variety lol.
@@Denvermorgan2000 a digital file on my own hard disk (or ssd) is also mine and nobody can take it away . as long as it is not on somebody else's cloud server I feel pretty safe owning my files. Every decade or so I copy them to new drives, and I have never lost anything important to me since 1997. And by making my own file server I can even access all of that anywhere in the world
Heck in the anime community it ain't going anywhere. Just last year I bough an anime movie (Wataten Precious Friends) in Blu Ray, a late 2022 movie with early 2023 physical release mind you, and it was still available in DVD form as well. The OST CDs (heh, 40+ years still kickin') I bought of that movie also came with a DVD (27 years and still kickin'). Now then, thinking back at it... Eve Blu Ray is getting quite old at now about 18 years old, but still nothing to scoff at. Heck, quite a lot of content out there still doesn't push it's limits.
@@hyperturbotechnomiketrue true.. plus less backwards compatible connections etc on newer electronics of manythpes makes it unfeasible or less economical than it wojld be to be able directly to connect with newer gear and older gear than a given peice of gears date of make.
Sony analog capture devices had fantastic time base correction. What a difference that makes for analog tape sources with any clock drift. If Sony made a device like this that could record to an SD Card, did H.264 or H.265 HEVC and supported 50i > 50p with Bob deinterlace image processing, I’d buy one in a heartbeat. I’m having to use a DV camera with a good analog input and time base corrector > Mac to help digitise old analog video sources correctly.
@@SirPreissMC absolutely agree. I like being able to save as ProRes422 native res and frame rate, and then from there build out a processed HEVC so that way if there’s ever something critically wrong with the process in future it’s very easy to go back and batch correct.
@@JarrydHall I'm talking about DV-coded files on the computer, not miniDV tapes. libavcodec (the software VLC and ffmpeg use) has supported DV literally for decades and it's not going to drop support anytime soon. You're always going to be able to convert DV-AVI to ProRes using free software. Since it's a lossy conversion _and_ takes up significantly more space, why not avoid it whenever possible? For general applications HEVC can have the same visual quality as ProRes at something like 1/8 the filesize. Only convert to ProRes if you need perfect instant scrubbing for editing _and_ your editing software can't handle DV.
That car salesman video was from 2005. I know because the Xterra was new for '05, and the 350Z had been out for about 2 years by then. That Mustang was only about 4-5 years old or so.
I remember seeing this same exact device on a Sony Magazine catalog back in around the late 2000s. Now I've finally see it in action at this video really blows my mind on how it's still practical, advanced, and depending who you ask, it's still a very handy gadget to own especially if you're into analog camcorders. Thank you for the video Kevin! Hopefully youll upload the future video you've mentioned at the end of the video.
I personally made these things valuable a few years after they stopped making them. To explain, I started a job as a video coordinator for a D1 soccer program and it was my responsibility to get a copy of the game to the away team. The teams played in an outdoor stadium with zero A/V equipment. They had a team laptop to record onto and then they would burn a DVD which took about 30 min. They usually had to mail the DVD to the away team the next day. I had been using a DVDirect for years. I could give the other team a DVD right away. The first time it happened I handed it to the opposing team manager right after the game and he was flummoxed. I told him about the unit. Word spread to other teams and because they weren't in stores anymore the prices on EBAY got crazy. They were going for $1,000 used at one point if I remember correctly. All the other teams had them by the next season.
I picked one of these up on Ebay for £19.99 (UK Pounds) with free shipping last year. I expected at that price it might be faulty even though the seller said it worked but no, it worked and still works perfectly. I was the only bidder on it too, which seems to be unusual as these units can sometimes go for quite a bit.
I used to use one of those DVD/VHS Hybrids which worked pretty well. You can still find them used from time to time. Later on I ripped those DVDs to my Hard Drives just to have them in an easier to use format.
This is a great converter, it’s a Sony! I’d definitely get something like this alongside a PowerMac for FireWire and hard drive backups, it’s nice that the video is the actual source video and not something converted. Old Sony equipment is still awesome, plus having a DVD backup alongside a digital file once you copy it over, is a nice bonus to have. Great video!
Thank you, thank you very much for your videos, love, time, and passion you share with us. I specially enjoy the little details or unaware items that catches your attention, your sensitivity to talk about them and show in fully disclosure. Also your voice and way to speak creates a relaxed and interested vibe, very very enjoyable. Sometimes i play your videos for sleeping, BUT not because they are boring, which they aren't ! It's because in some way you transmit some calmness that helps me to deal with my daily anxiety. Please do not take this like something negative, because it's the opposite. Sometimes we need some calm and time to focus and put interest in watching content, specially the kind you post in your channel, which is very engaging. So please keep up with your videos, your passion and love. In a virtual way, you transmit loads of them. Thanks a lot again ❤
I bought the same exact model of this DVDirect machine complete in box at a local thrift store for only $20! It works well as a backup digitizer. The prices on amazon and eBay are crazy though.
I used to have this, I bought it from Best Buy for digitizing video from camcorders, and I did my uncle’s wedding on that recorder. But the biggest problem I had with this, was finalizing discs is so slow and it didn’t work with DVD+RW discs. I prefer using a versatile DVD recorder that lets me add more content. I use a Pioneer external DVD recorder for my computer to save video recordings from my phone to DVDs!
This is one of the best options for digitizing analog videos because the video signal remains unchanged. Even in digital form, it continues to be an interlaced SD video format, either PAL or NTSC, playable on both PC and dedicated CRT televisions. To do even better than this, you need to buy some professional video capture cards and hope to make them work.
The video signal changes from analog voltages then is digitized of course. Digitizing means the signal is stepped and is no longer super smooth continuous analog voltages.
I'm quite impressed with the quality of the conversion. It looks better than most video's I've seen that people did with computer video capture devices. I guess the Sony device does some 'digital magic' to optimize the video conversion.
It's the same with cars. If you buy a read made one, it runs well and does the job well. You could cobble together your own... You will then have anything from a soap box racer to a kit car that took you years to put together and ages longer to work out the kinks. When I started digitising my home videos in the early 00's I cobbled together a solution with my PC and capture cards. Many do today and if you like the voyage of discovery and don't mind buying really expensive stuff based on opinions that may not pan out then you can still cobble together a solution and you will learn loads about video standards and colour ranges etc. Interesting stuff. Then if you are like me after doing all that you realise that the best thing is to buy something that was designed to do that job, can be had second hand for practically nothing and although there are models to avoid and some points to learn about they tend to get it done pretty well.
@@dlarge6502Yeah, most of the conversions I've seen were done with stuff like an elgato video capture device or something similar. I think what mostly goes wrong is that the video is not properly de-interlaced. The Sony device does this by default I guess.
9:07 I loved the hefty ol' DCR-TRV - it was the cheapest digital camcorder at the time, and compatible Hi8 cassettes were plentiful. Still works, even the battery. Plus the awesome IR mode meant I could walk around in the dark like an idiot pretending I had night vision. Great video, as always!
This was a fantastic all-encompassing review. The DVDirect has been my best kept secret for my analog video transfer work. I still use a D8 Handycam to convert analog 8mm and Hi8 to digital over FireWire and then capture the “digitized” output using my PC, but for redundancy (and because it’s so simple), I also use the DVDirect to record the composite output from the camcorder to DVD at the same time. I’ll still ultimately burn a DVD using the DV-AVI file I captured on my PC, but the DVDirect’s results usually track pretty closely with the quality of the PC-involved way. It’s a shame my VRD-MC6 lacks an S video input, however, as that would undoubtedly yield even better results. Seeing my almost 10-year-old video on my VRD-MC6 linked here (that was nowhere near as extensive as yours on the MC5) came as a pleasant surprise. Time sure flies!
the reason people think physical media is obsolete is because big corporations make more money from subscription services than they would from selling physical media, and also big corporations would rather have you use some space on their computers in exchange for them knowing more about you and maybe also getting money from you, than they would you buying an external hard drive. oh yeah and also the fact you can make dirt cheap laptops with dogwater hardware even cheaper if you remove the optical disc drive. and those quote unquote fancy all in one pcs don't even have a place where you could reasonably put one. cuz like. why would you store your photos on an SD card or a DVD if you can put them on the Cloud (which is just a fancy word for "someone else's computer")? why would you waste space in your house on movie DVDs if you can spend 70 bucks every month on 3 different subscriptions (and lose access to your favorite movies whenever netflix decides it won't let you watch them anymore)? why would you buy a tower pc that isn't even pre-assembled if you can get a laptop for less money and less effort that is far more portable (and with worse hardware)? we live in a boring dystopia.
I miss having a dvd recorder. Never made it through all my tapes before it died. Must've made 400+ DVDs in. But I'd love to get one of these to finish burning the rest of my tapes.
I bought myself a panasonic dmr-es15 dvd recorder last year for cheap. Works like a charm. If your VCR doesn't have TBC I would highly recommend the one I have or dmr-es10. These models have a built in TBC-like feature that fixes playback on wobbly tapes. It saved a tape with my childhood memories that was unusable before. Much better playback in general, less signal loss on old tapes. I actually capture my tapes to a computer with an old TV Tuner/capture card thingy, while only passing the signal through this DVD recorder. But this feature would work when just recording DVDs too.
Great video! And perfect timing as I've just started digitizing a bunch of old tapes with a Sony RDR-VX535 combo unit. Looks like the process is pretty much the same on this unit! The only difference is I'm using a program called MakeMKV to rip the DVDs.
My grandfather was computer illiterate, he would've LOVED one of these. A little device to burn all of his Video 8's and DVs to a DVD? He spent so much money getting them done at Costco.
I have the previous model (VRD-MC3) which is very similar if not near identical to this version, except for a few cosmetic differences as far as appearance goes. The analog inputs had a flaw in that on the recorded DVD, the video would tend to be a few frames ahead of the audio, even with the latest firmware, and it would always cut down the black level making certain sources appear darker (i.e. dv over s-video or more modern game consoles). Using firewire, however, never had sync problems nor did it alter the source, so sometimes I would run analog sources through a MiniDV camcorder's input, then firewire out to the MC3. However, as these devices were aimed at consumers looking to digitise VHS or video 8, this was a good feature since it brought the black level down from 7.5 ire on vhs, closer to 0 ire or "digital black", so that on computers and other digital displays black's looked normal and not washed out. I suspect the MC5 does the same, and judging by your samples the sync issue has been fixed.
There are a lot of set top DVD recorders made by companies such as Lite-on, Sony, Panasonic, etc that you basically plug in the source in the back, hit play and record. SOME of the combo dvd/vcr units will record to dvd, but most dont
I totally agree. I love computers, particularly old ones. I love microcontrollers and would love to program a PIC microcontroller using nothing newer than DOS and preferably older. I used to digitise my VHS tapes etc using a TV card in my PC, as well as the Iomega Buzz which was SCSI based and encoded MPEG1 on the fly. But with the mess you can get into, with capture cards that cant handle a dirty signal etc, I settled on using DVD recorders. I use them to record and archive live TV. I use them to edit too as although YMMV with the features of any particular recorder, some have excellent frame accurate editing. The recorded TV or digitised VHS tapes might simply be burned to DVD+R for archival, or to give to family or be finally taken to the PC for ripping and further editing or encoding as needed. I do the same for audio with a CD Recorder, and a flash based audio recorder for much longer stuff that wont fit on a CD. Computers are great when you can employ the algorithms to do amazing things. But if you are simply capturing, why not used devices that were actually *designed* to do just that. Although I'll copy my miniDV tapes via the PC and firewire, these standalone devices can do it too and they were designed to. It's like using a toaster, an appliance to make toast vs writing code for a Raspberry Pi to do the same thing. Anyone who has seen Red Dwarf will know what an A.I in a toaster will experience :D ua-cam.com/video/LRq_SAuQDec/v-deo.html
Hi. I bought a Sony hdr sr 12e hd (1080i), video camera in the 2006 ish? Not sure.. And the dvd recorder later. At the time, I didn’t have, and didn’t want a pc. But you didn’t mention: With the usb cable, I can record in hd, using “avchd” function. Using a ordinary dvd r disc, it rooms approximately 32 min, in 1080i quality! And having a blu ray player, who have avcd playback functionality. It was working brilliant for me! The picture quality on the disc is almost better than direct from the camera. And the camera and the recorder still works😎😎
Just found one of these brand new in box in the trash. I’m surprised I didn’t even know they existed. I would’ve killed for one of these when they were new lol. Thanks for the video dude, brought me up to speed
After watching your recent trilogy of digital transfer methods, I came back to this one as the method I liked the best. Just bought one on eBay for $54 along with a Sony CCD-TRV138 Hi8 camcorder.
Predicting the next video is about analog/digital pass through via digital camcorders 😎 This method will give you very good capturing results if the camcorder has TBC build in.
i have an MC1 it found it at goodwill for 20 bucks like 14 years ago. its pretty awesome. Have had to use it as a boot drive on old computers a half a dozen times.
I love computers, and involving them in digitizing process is mandatory for me, because the digitized picture should be processed (at least cropping the black edges and the crumpled bottom). Sometimes - de-grained too. And de-noised sound, of course. And if it's DVD, I'm not even talking about menu authoring.
I’ve seen one of these at an old job! I don’t think we ever used it, though. Just captured to DV and converted to DVD MPEG2 using MediaEncoder and burned with Encore.
I recently repaired the Sony HDR-HC3 HDV Handycam, the first model to have either tape or HDD. Great Handycam and very similar to my Sony 4K Handycam a few years later.
I used one of these for a bit because I like digitize tapes using a DVD recorder. The only reason I stopped using it was because Sony DVD recorders have a nasty habit of "pausing" recordings when the signal switches or becomes too weak, which meant a lot of "skips" on stuff I captured (mostly Betamax tapes that are getting along in years). I prefer Panasonic DVD Recorders because they have built in TBCs which stops them pausing during problematic spots on the tape.
Couldn't agree more. I've used many DVD recorders over the years and in terms of quality, Panasonic was the gold standard. In addition to the TBC you mentioned with hardly any skips, the bitrates/compression and the features pretty much blew everybody else out of the water. Their built-in noise reduction was fantastic [for the time] and that phenomenal "flexible recording" feature where you could input the recording length and it would calculate the remainder of the disc space and record in the highest possible bitrate. You weren't locked into a few recording "modes" with huge steps in quality.
"I hate computers." Story of your life, except it's a love-hate relationship only your therapist knows in detail. Well what do you know, VWestlife pinned this comment. Thanks, amigo. :)
Hey VWestlife. I saw on the news about an earthquake you all just had in you all's area. I just wanted to make sure you're doing alright and made it through that no problems. Thank you!😀
I definitely used some of those expensive transfer services in the past before I realized our local public library network has equipment to transfer VHS to DVD and Vinyl to CD that's completely free to use.
Neat little device! Whenever I have to do any VHS to DVD transfer work I have a 6 head LG combination VHS/DVD unit sending the signal over composite to a Panasonic BWT-955's internal HDD, which I can then burn out to DVD or even BluRays. 2TB of recording space helps a lot. I also have a Sony RDR-HXD890 as a backup machine should I need to record from a DV device or S-Video.
i would recommend makemkv rather than vob2mpg as it can automatically merge and cut video parts (without reencoding) also if you use VLC you dont need any additional extentions and codecs ;)
I’ve gone through a lot of my family’s old tapes recently, a lot recorded when camcorders were new and fascinating objects. I’m torn between the utter uselessness of most of it, and the pure fascination of watching a long ago moment in time captured forever.
@@greatquux i think the appreciation of it can become the enjoyment, thats how its become for me. Also some of the most useless stuff to me feels the most human sometimes.
@willyblon Back in the 70s and 80s when I was using super 8 movie cameras and 35 mm film. I would often catch family members and friends in candid shots. My grandfather once said to me later " I notice you get pictures of people when they're least aware of it. And that's when you should, because you get 'em in their natural element!" So the "useless" type of videos that are being referenced here oftentimes give you a more accurate picture of your inner circle and family members. And i'm glad that I have those type of things in my family Archive.
The early-2000's energy of these videos is mesmerizing. What a weird and sad time it was. Even the video smell of inflation and the impending economic crisis...
This model is common in Malaysia so maybe considering getting this someday to digitise my laserdiscs despite already have some decent capture devices such as BMD Intensity Shuttle, Matrox MX02 MINI and Pinnacle Avid 6 capture device.
Or you could go really crazy and use a Domesday Duplicator along with ld-decode . The YT channel Tech Tangent has a pair of videos going over using those to "rip" Laserdiscs.
I really need to get one of these used, the quality of the recording is so amazing! And it can do both, PAL and NTSC. So far I've only found it new for 300€ though and that's not a price I'm willing to pay. It's an amazing product though!
This would have been a really neat device back in the day. As for DVD ripping, instead of converting VOBs, get a tool called Handbrake. It's open-source, simple to use and needs no external codecs.
Oh man, all those formats...... but...... this seems a good and well thought out device! Like you mentioned at the end of the video, recording on SD, SSD or HDD will make it a perfect solution. To record from an audio source, I use something similar, the Tascam DR7. No computer required and easy as 1,2,3. This older one has a proper audio line-in input newer models don't have. I bought it brand new an paid $120 for it, worth any penny. Quality is outstanding and it is very easy to transfer the files to the computer or other device.
Hmm, hopefully Neener, Neener and Neener simply haven't gotten around to forwarding my royalty check for the "real computer" and "weeny modern computer" phrases. 😛 Years ago, I found a VRD-MC5 at a thrift store brand new in its box. I've only ever used it once, mainly to make sure it worked.
I have this recorder and it's seriously a lot simpler than dealing with computer and capture cards. The only downside is that on one tape I dubbed the macrovision crapped out on home recorded tape. Did you know it has built in music for slideshows?
We are so reliant on streaming now that without the Internet most people would have little to no media at home if it was to go out in say a war. Pretty scary to think about!
Doesn't even have to be a war. It can be (1) expiration of a licensing agreement, or (2) the publisher revoking access to perform a tax write-off on an "underperforming" IP, something happening with increasing frequency nowadays in which case the content essentially vanishes forever in terms of legal access. (excluding, of course the _"Yarrr"_ method)
DVD is a great physical format, However the format encoding and compression by today's standard suck, That's why analog tape formats are better captured in lossless AVI, cropped, upscaled and encoded to modern more efficient codecs.
I fail to see the problem. DVD has twice the resolution of VHS and more than enough bandwidth. My main camcorder records in HD MPEG2 streams. I literally cant see the difference beyond filesizes vs something like mpg2 and mpg4. I fact that the only benefit I can see between codecs, newer ones, with a huge amount of CPU time, make smaller files. I capture everything on a DVD recorder, it does everything from TBC to editing. I can rip the MPG2 off the disc if needed and reencode as a smaller mp4 if I really need to otherwise MPG2 is the final format and plays absolutely on everything you can find. Unlike mp4, which is a minefeild of supported or unsupported codes and profiles.
@@dlarge6502 DV has 25Mbps bitrate, MPEG2 is a better codec but there's still some loss when reencoding, more so if the MPEG2 bitrate falls to 4-5Mbps. Even for analog capture it can produce visible loss in quality, especially if the source is noisy. This device is pretty good for people who want to digitize tapes without knowing anything about the process, but it's far from optimal.
@@dlarge6502 No, it has nothing to do with resolution and I never mentioned resolution, VHS is noisy and MPEG-2 compression algorithm gets crazy trying to compress a video with noise which ends up as a hot mess, micro blocking due to luma low dynamic range ...etc. mp4 is just a container, you mean h.264 codec. h.264 is miles better than mpeg-2 if compared for the same bitrate. that's why it was abused and used at very low bitrates that people think it's worse than mpeg-2, It is not. If you are happy with the way you're doing it keep doing so, but it doesn't mean that there aren't better ways out there.
@@dlarge6502 twice the resolution of vhs is not good enough. I am not an audiophile or video snob, but when I watch something on a modern tv, I want it to be at least 1920x1080 , which looks good. i don;t need 4k or 8k, but 480p is just not enough, that was cool on crt tv's 20 years ago, but not anymore
@@dlarge6502 MPEG-2 SD on a DVD is a final format indeed for watching at SD quality. If you need a re-edit you need to go to the original, which in the case of DV will be DV, in the case of HDV will be HDV, in the case of AVCHD will be AVCHD, and in the case of VHS/Hi8 will be a lossless or visually-lossless format with enough bitrate to record all the imperfections of a crappy analog video.
@@VinylPro What do you mean? You have a DV original recorded by the camera by default, and additionally, you can choose to transfer it to DVD for a number of reasons- Like not having to always use the camera as a player for instance.
If you want the best quality, you can still pick up Firewire cards that work on Windows 11, I got one for £15 on Amazon to rip footage from my Sony PDW-510P broadcast camera.
I think reading comprehension was switched off for a few commenters today 😂 It's not possible for it to transfer losslessly from dv to dvd as you recognised, it's more for convenience on somewhat of a budget rather than maintaining perfect 1:1 quality Most people would be unlikely to care or even notice the difference between a raw dv capture and a dvd copy, and that's what these devices are banking on
I acquired one of these out of an old ridgid seesnake drain camera I bought years ago it’s in a pelican case and has its own power supply using a sealed lead acid
When someone says to me that DVDs and Blu-rays are obsolete, I always say Netflix took down Inuyasha because their licence expired. This can happen with everything
I was jumping for joy when I saw that an Anime I wanted to rewatch from the 90's was on Amazon Prime. I started watching it, finally managing to understand it (in the 90's I didn't quite get all of it).
3 episodes in, they took it down.
I bought the DVD instead.
Torrent.
Having a dvd collection is too big of a hassle nowadays, I prefer having a nas with video files + jellyfin so that I have my media library organized nearly
Absolutely goated anime
@@ConsumerDV Torrent is blocked in the UK. I haven't heard of anyone using it for years, it's dead here. Yes, you could use a VPN but I work in IT so know how far I trust a VPN that isn't my own.
All of those recordings are precious. I always look at the date and think about how old I was and where I was at the time. I also think about those people and what might have happened to them.
Yea
I bought one of these on Facebook to transfer my old home movies from vhs to dvd, and I have to say this machine is fantastic! For about half a year I offered a service to locals in my area to transfer their tapes to dvd for $5 a piece. I had people bringing me 20-30 tapes at a time! It was great! but it was so time consuming. I had to watch the video almost all the time to make sure it wasn't just recording a blank screen or someone's tv recording from 20 years ago. I wasn't doing it for the money, I learned a lot along the way and helped many people save their memories for future generations. I also picked up a quick copier on eBay, to make duplicates for people who wanted multiple copies. I still have both machines and two rather good vhs players that I will continue to use and cherish.
Lots of my discs are rotting away, always keep your master tapes.
You can easily get even CD-Rs in Staples, Amazon, etc. DVD is nowhere near obsolete - organizations wanting to push it out in favour of streaming are wanting you to swallow and accept the "you won't own anything and be happy."
As far as digitizing tape, I use an ATI capture card on an old XP rig. I made enough money doing that in college and uni ;)
They're "obsolete" in the sense that Blu Rays and even UHD discs are a thing, and they're (obviously) much higher quality. But yeah, DVDs are still sold and stuff. They're like 480p, though, heh.
Just today, a video game publisher disabled the video game people paid up to $60 for because it wasn't making them enough money. Thankfully with physical media, the game publisher can't come into my home and take my purchase away. Same with video and audio content. The only reason why they're doing this is for control, paywalling and greater profit at our expense. I'm now even seeing the same model being applied to physical goods where you pay for a licence and pay again an ongoing subscription fee to use that product that can be revoked at any time and incorporate planned obsolescence by design.
@@tgheretfordIn that case if paying for games and movies isn't owning them then piracy isn't stealing.
"If buying isn't owning, then piracy isn't stealing"
As far as digitizing tape went, did you even use any sort of time-base correction?
I love that you're getting your money's worth with those transitions.
It's some sort of service?
@@the_kombinator he bought the catalog
@@wardman21 I'm still not following - catalog of? From where? What is it called?
@@the_kombinatordefunct nowadays, I recall
And i like the blue theme on transitions
Nah, physical media's not obsolete, that's just the streaming services telling us that, cos they would rather we hand over money for something we can't keep... :P
and they will have control over what you watch. I have a Roku and most of the free films are total trash (to me) I will also not subscribe to any pay service. I prefer films made over 40 years ago.
Physical media is not obsolete. Blu-ray is not obsolete. DVDs are.
@@romangiertych5198 Yes, blu-ray is still superior to streaming video.
@@romangiertych5198lmao DVDS are NOT obsolete lol they still sell them lmao 😂
@@soulslip Because ignorants buy them.
That DV with its high frame rate really looks good even today.
I can’t thank you enough for this video. I had transferred old home movies on cheap software a few years ago and the quality wasn’t good, but at least they were preserved was my mentality. I saw this video and it actually motivated me enough to find one(I actually got the next model up without the s video) and start the whole process over again.
I used to transfer DV video to DVD recorder and the quality is way better than PC capture card. I can say this one is also a DVD recorder but it's SO COOL.
I bought one of these at work for transferring MiniDV tapes, since I liked going directly from digital DV to digital DVD, without analog steps in the middle. The built-in screen was a bonus so I didn't need a separate TV setup. I could just start the recording and come back later when it finished. In addition to the later VRD-MC6 mentioned in the video, there's also the earlier VRD-MC1 and VRD-MC3 recorders, but I think the VRD-MC5 had some advantage over them, which I can no longer recall. It may be I just wanted a new one, and the VRD-MC5 was the cheapest one I could find new.
One feature not mentioned is if you don't have a DVD-ROM drive, you can use a standard USB B cable to plug the VRD-MC5 into your laptop/PC, and it will operate like an external PC DVD-ROM burner. So you can rip discs using it, or even burn other content from your computer using it. The card readers also showed up on the PC, so you can use it as a card reader.
7:42 - translation for those who need it
- (Go ahead) Yellow,
(Go ahead) silver,
(Go ahead) and white and- (no, [just] white!)
(Go ahead) white and all the colors on the Z350 sports car!
([unintelligible]) Or I’ll stay- [she complains here]
- (Go ahead) white and all the colors on this sporty Z350!
- (Go ahead) XTerras for adventurers* like you!
*gendered M/F
(I really wonder how you got this clip, this place looks oddly familiar… LA?)
I wonder who she is?
"Mostang...Mustang"
Orange, CA. The tapes were from Douglas Nissan of Orange, before they got busted for fraud.
@@vwestlifehey vwestlife you should do more videos on other audiocrazy cassette boomboxes to see if the use a higher quality CSG mechanism
Man, CCD footage looks so smooth and rock solid.
And yeah, DVDs are still sold, I always laugh when people claim that DVDs are obsolete, sites like DMM still sell lots of DVDs of the adult variety lol.
It might be convenient to have a digital download.But there's still something to be said for owning a hard copy.It's yours and nobody else's.
@@Denvermorgan2000 a digital file on my own hard disk (or ssd) is also mine and nobody can take it away . as long as it is not on somebody else's cloud server I feel pretty safe owning my files. Every decade or so I copy them to new drives, and I have never lost anything important to me since 1997. And by making my own file server I can even access all of that anywhere in the world
@@Blackadder75 Exactly. A file is a hard copy.
Heck in the anime community it ain't going anywhere.
Just last year I bough an anime movie (Wataten Precious Friends) in Blu Ray, a late 2022 movie with early 2023 physical release mind you, and it was still available in DVD form as well.
The OST CDs (heh, 40+ years still kickin') I bought of that movie also came with a DVD (27 years and still kickin').
Now then, thinking back at it... Eve Blu Ray is getting quite old at now about 18 years old, but still nothing to scoff at. Heck, quite a lot of content out there still doesn't push it's limits.
I'm so impressed at how that guy tripped off that travelator!
"I hate computers" Finally someone has the courage to say it.
Computer are good depending on what your using them for. 🤨🤦🏻♂️
As a microelectronics engineer, i can confirm. Computers are a nightmare.
@@hyperturbotechnomike why do you say that?
@@niceguy01 The hardware side of computers is mostly fine, but most software sucks, especially nowadays.
@@hyperturbotechnomiketrue true.. plus less backwards compatible connections etc on newer electronics of manythpes makes it unfeasible or less economical than it wojld be to be able directly to connect with newer gear and older gear than a given peice of gears date of make.
What a nifty little rig! And presumably it's doing time base correction too.
Absolutely no TBC on the one I had. It made it pause recording a lot.
My thought exactly. I built a rack filled with expensive stuff including a tbc to do this about 25 years ago. That sony is a little gem!
Great now I'm trying to acquire yet another obscure product I never knew existed before today
So funny! Exactly the same here and I picked one up today !
My wife found one of these for about $25 at a resale store today and now I'm here!
Sony analog capture devices had fantastic time base correction. What a difference that makes for analog tape sources with any clock drift.
If Sony made a device like this that could record to an SD Card, did H.264 or H.265 HEVC and supported 50i > 50p with Bob deinterlace image processing, I’d buy one in a heartbeat. I’m having to use a DV camera with a good analog input and time base corrector > Mac to help digitise old analog video sources correctly.
Have the same setup. It's the best that you can get at home when ripping VHS tapes.
@@SirPreissMC absolutely agree. I like being able to save as ProRes422 native res and frame rate, and then from there build out a processed HEVC so that way if there’s ever something critically wrong with the process in future it’s very easy to go back and batch correct.
@@JarrydHall If you're using DV as an intermediate then keep your reference copy as DV. There's no need to mess with ProRes.
@@eDoc2020 I agree to one point (it is reference) but on the other hand DV playback is getting harder every year.
@@JarrydHall I'm talking about DV-coded files on the computer, not miniDV tapes. libavcodec (the software VLC and ffmpeg use) has supported DV literally for decades and it's not going to drop support anytime soon. You're always going to be able to convert DV-AVI to ProRes using free software. Since it's a lossy conversion _and_ takes up significantly more space, why not avoid it whenever possible?
For general applications HEVC can have the same visual quality as ProRes at something like 1/8 the filesize. Only convert to ProRes if you need perfect instant scrubbing for editing _and_ your editing software can't handle DV.
i dunno why i laughed so hard at 0:22 when the disk fell out
That car salesman video was from 2005.
I know because the Xterra was new for '05, and the 350Z had been out for about 2 years by then.
That Mustang was only about 4-5 years old or so.
I remember seeing this same exact device on a Sony Magazine catalog back in around the late 2000s.
Now I've finally see it in action at this video really blows my mind on how it's still practical, advanced, and depending who you ask, it's still a very handy gadget to own especially if you're into analog camcorders.
Thank you for the video Kevin!
Hopefully youll upload the future video you've mentioned at the end of the video.
I personally made these things valuable a few years after they stopped making them. To explain, I started a job as a video coordinator for a D1 soccer program and it was my responsibility to get a copy of the game to the away team. The teams played in an outdoor stadium with zero A/V equipment. They had a team laptop to record onto and then they would burn a DVD which took about 30 min. They usually had to mail the DVD to the away team the next day. I had been using a DVDirect for years. I could give the other team a DVD right away. The first time it happened I handed it to the opposing team manager right after the game and he was flummoxed. I told him about the unit. Word spread to other teams and because they weren't in stores anymore the prices on EBAY got crazy. They were going for $1,000 used at one point if I remember correctly. All the other teams had them by the next season.
I picked one of these up on Ebay for £19.99 (UK Pounds) with free shipping last year. I expected at that price it might be faulty even though the seller said it worked but no, it worked and still works perfectly. I was the only bidder on it too, which seems to be unusual as these units can sometimes go for quite a bit.
Yet again you surpass all of our expectations finding those obscure devices we never knew existed or knew we needed in our lives.
If I had known about this gadget - I would have definatley brought one . I miss the days when SONY invented stuff you may want ...Great Video
I used to use one of those DVD/VHS Hybrids which worked pretty well. You can still find them used from time to time.
Later on I ripped those DVDs to my Hard Drives just to have them in an easier to use format.
This is a great converter, it’s a Sony! I’d definitely get something like this alongside a PowerMac for FireWire and hard drive backups, it’s nice that the video is the actual source video and not something converted. Old Sony equipment is still awesome, plus having a DVD backup alongside a digital file once you copy it over, is a nice bonus to have. Great video!
Thank you, thank you very much for your videos, love, time, and passion you share with us. I specially enjoy the little details or unaware items that catches your attention, your sensitivity to talk about them and show in fully disclosure. Also your voice and way to speak creates a relaxed and interested vibe, very very enjoyable. Sometimes i play your videos for sleeping, BUT not because they are boring, which they aren't ! It's because in some way you transmit some calmness that helps me to deal with my daily anxiety. Please do not take this like something negative, because it's the opposite. Sometimes we need some calm and time to focus and put interest in watching content, specially the kind you post in your channel, which is very engaging.
So please keep up with your videos, your passion and love. In a virtual way, you transmit loads of them. Thanks a lot again ❤
I bought the same exact model of this DVDirect machine complete in box at a local thrift store for only $20! It works well as a backup digitizer. The prices on amazon and eBay are crazy though.
I used to have this, I bought it from Best Buy for digitizing video from camcorders, and I did my uncle’s wedding on that recorder. But the biggest problem I had with this, was finalizing discs is so slow and it didn’t work with DVD+RW discs. I prefer using a versatile DVD recorder that lets me add more content. I use a Pioneer external DVD recorder for my computer to save video recordings from my phone to DVDs!
This one does support DVD+RW.
@@vwestlifeit depends on the model revision. Rewritable discs didn’t work on an older model.
This is one of the best options for digitizing analog videos because the video signal remains unchanged. Even in digital form, it continues to be an interlaced SD video format, either PAL or NTSC, playable on both PC and dedicated CRT televisions. To do even better than this, you need to buy some professional video capture cards and hope to make them work.
The video signal changes from analog voltages then is digitized of course. Digitizing means the signal is stepped and is no longer super smooth continuous analog voltages.
@@alphabeets In layperson terms it makes it look worse? is it possible to digitize it at all without losing quality?
“I hate computers”
Couldn’t be farther from the truth
I hate people but love computers
I hate Nissan cars with CVT but love automatic transmissions on Honda, Toyota, Lexus, VW, etc. and yes its April Fools Day.
Weakerthans has entered the chat
🎶I... hate... Winnipeg.
Farther or further?
I think most people who love computers also hate them a bit.
I'm quite impressed with the quality of the conversion. It looks better than most video's I've seen that people did with computer video capture devices. I guess the Sony device does some 'digital magic' to optimize the video conversion.
It's the same with cars.
If you buy a read made one, it runs well and does the job well.
You could cobble together your own... You will then have anything from a soap box racer to a kit car that took you years to put together and ages longer to work out the kinks.
When I started digitising my home videos in the early 00's I cobbled together a solution with my PC and capture cards. Many do today and if you like the voyage of discovery and don't mind buying really expensive stuff based on opinions that may not pan out then you can still cobble together a solution and you will learn loads about video standards and colour ranges etc. Interesting stuff.
Then if you are like me after doing all that you realise that the best thing is to buy something that was designed to do that job, can be had second hand for practically nothing and although there are models to avoid and some points to learn about they tend to get it done pretty well.
@@dlarge6502Yeah, most of the conversions I've seen were done with stuff like an elgato video capture device or something similar. I think what mostly goes wrong is that the video is not properly de-interlaced. The Sony device does this by default I guess.
I kept expecting you to take the white packaging off but then realized, no, that's actually the device.
It’s stuff like this that help me remember that the months it took to back up every VHS I own was worth it.
9:07 I loved the hefty ol' DCR-TRV - it was the cheapest digital camcorder at the time, and compatible Hi8 cassettes were plentiful. Still works, even the battery. Plus the awesome IR mode meant I could walk around in the dark like an idiot pretending I had night vision. Great video, as always!
We don't make mistakes. we have happy accidents!
--Bob Ross
This was a fantastic all-encompassing review. The DVDirect has been my best kept secret for my analog video transfer work. I still use a D8 Handycam to convert analog 8mm and Hi8 to digital over FireWire and then capture the “digitized” output using my PC, but for redundancy (and because it’s so simple), I also use the DVDirect to record the composite output from the camcorder to DVD at the same time. I’ll still ultimately burn a DVD using the DV-AVI file I captured on my PC, but the DVDirect’s results usually track pretty closely with the quality of the PC-involved way. It’s a shame my VRD-MC6 lacks an S video input, however, as that would undoubtedly yield even better results.
Seeing my almost 10-year-old video on my VRD-MC6 linked here (that was nowhere near as extensive as yours on the MC5) came as a pleasant surprise. Time sure flies!
the reason people think physical media is obsolete is because big corporations make more money from subscription services than they would from selling physical media, and also big corporations would rather have you use some space on their computers in exchange for them knowing more about you and maybe also getting money from you, than they would you buying an external hard drive. oh yeah and also the fact you can make dirt cheap laptops with dogwater hardware even cheaper if you remove the optical disc drive. and those quote unquote fancy all in one pcs don't even have a place where you could reasonably put one.
cuz like. why would you store your photos on an SD card or a DVD if you can put them on the Cloud (which is just a fancy word for "someone else's computer")? why would you waste space in your house on movie DVDs if you can spend 70 bucks every month on 3 different subscriptions (and lose access to your favorite movies whenever netflix decides it won't let you watch them anymore)? why would you buy a tower pc that isn't even pre-assembled if you can get a laptop for less money and less effort that is far more portable (and with worse hardware)?
we live in a boring dystopia.
I miss having a dvd recorder. Never made it through all my tapes before it died. Must've made 400+ DVDs in. But I'd love to get one of these to finish burning the rest of my tapes.
I bought myself a panasonic dmr-es15 dvd recorder last year for cheap. Works like a charm. If your VCR doesn't have TBC I would highly recommend the one I have or dmr-es10. These models have a built in TBC-like feature that fixes playback on wobbly tapes. It saved a tape with my childhood memories that was unusable before. Much better playback in general, less signal loss on old tapes. I actually capture my tapes to a computer with an old TV Tuner/capture card thingy, while only passing the signal through this DVD recorder. But this feature would work when just recording DVDs too.
Great video! And perfect timing as I've just started digitizing a bunch of old tapes with a Sony RDR-VX535 combo unit. Looks like the process is pretty much the same on this unit! The only difference is I'm using a program called MakeMKV to rip the DVDs.
I miss my dvd recorder from 2005, got me through college using it as a cable tuner for my hitachi hand me down tv that went up to ch 36 on catv.
In just 23 hours you have jacked the price up on these units. I used to call that the Techmoan effect
Techmoan already looked at this device so it's happened before.
My grandfather was computer illiterate, he would've LOVED one of these. A little device to burn all of his Video 8's and DVs to a DVD? He spent so much money getting them done at Costco.
I have the previous model (VRD-MC3) which is very similar if not near identical to this version, except for a few cosmetic differences as far as appearance goes. The analog inputs had a flaw in that on the recorded DVD, the video would tend to be a few frames ahead of the audio, even with the latest firmware, and it would always cut down the black level making certain sources appear darker (i.e. dv over s-video or more modern game consoles). Using firewire, however, never had sync problems nor did it alter the source, so sometimes I would run analog sources through a MiniDV camcorder's input, then firewire out to the MC3. However, as these devices were aimed at consumers looking to digitise VHS or video 8, this was a good feature since it brought the black level down from 7.5 ire on vhs, closer to 0 ire or "digital black", so that on computers and other digital displays black's looked normal and not washed out. I suspect the MC5 does the same, and judging by your samples the sync issue has been fixed.
There are a lot of set top DVD recorders made by companies such as Lite-on, Sony, Panasonic, etc that you basically plug in the source in the back, hit play and record. SOME of the combo dvd/vcr units will record to dvd, but most dont
I totally agree. I love computers, particularly old ones. I love microcontrollers and would love to program a PIC microcontroller using nothing newer than DOS and preferably older.
I used to digitise my VHS tapes etc using a TV card in my PC, as well as the Iomega Buzz which was SCSI based and encoded MPEG1 on the fly. But with the mess you can get into, with capture cards that cant handle a dirty signal etc, I settled on using DVD recorders.
I use them to record and archive live TV. I use them to edit too as although YMMV with the features of any particular recorder, some have excellent frame accurate editing. The recorded TV or digitised VHS tapes might simply be burned to DVD+R for archival, or to give to family or be finally taken to the PC for ripping and further editing or encoding as needed.
I do the same for audio with a CD Recorder, and a flash based audio recorder for much longer stuff that wont fit on a CD.
Computers are great when you can employ the algorithms to do amazing things. But if you are simply capturing, why not used devices that were actually *designed* to do just that. Although I'll copy my miniDV tapes via the PC and firewire, these standalone devices can do it too and they were designed to.
It's like using a toaster, an appliance to make toast vs writing code for a Raspberry Pi to do the same thing. Anyone who has seen Red Dwarf will know what an A.I in a toaster will experience :D
ua-cam.com/video/LRq_SAuQDec/v-deo.html
Hi.
I bought a Sony hdr sr 12e hd (1080i), video camera in the 2006 ish? Not sure..
And the dvd recorder later. At the time, I didn’t have, and didn’t want a pc.
But you didn’t mention:
With the usb cable, I can record in hd, using “avchd” function.
Using a ordinary dvd r disc, it rooms approximately 32 min, in 1080i quality!
And having a blu ray player, who have avcd playback functionality.
It was working brilliant for me!
The picture quality on the disc is almost better than direct from the camera.
And the camera and the recorder still works😎😎
Excellent detailed review about this and it's capabilities. I'm curious to see the recording device you teased at the end. Keep up the great work!
Just found one of these brand new in box in the trash. I’m surprised I didn’t even know they existed. I would’ve killed for one of these when they were new lol. Thanks for the video dude, brought me up to speed
Gotten anymore Heartburn America magazines lately? Sure would to know what kind of crap they are trying to unload nowadays.
I just went on their website and i’d say the stuff is even worse now than when he made that video about it.
@@TechHowden I don't know if I should be horrified or impressed.
What a fun ride. I never even knew this type of product existed.
After watching your recent trilogy of digital transfer methods, I came back to this one as the method I liked the best. Just bought one on eBay for $54 along with a Sony CCD-TRV138 Hi8 camcorder.
I have this unit. I bought it brand new from Best Buy. It's a great little unit. I was able to transfer a lot of homemade videos of my family on it.
Predicting the next video is about analog/digital pass through via digital camcorders 😎
This method will give you very good capturing results if the camcorder has TBC build in.
I haven't seen the movie maker interface in years. Thanks for the throwback.
i have an MC1 it found it at goodwill for 20 bucks like 14 years ago. its pretty awesome. Have had to use it as a boot drive on old computers a half a dozen times.
I love computers, and involving them in digitizing process is mandatory for me, because the digitized picture should be processed (at least cropping the black edges and the crumpled bottom). Sometimes - de-grained too. And de-noised sound, of course. And if it's DVD, I'm not even talking about menu authoring.
I’ve seen one of these at an old job! I don’t think we ever used it, though. Just captured to DV and converted to DVD MPEG2 using MediaEncoder and burned with Encore.
I recently repaired the Sony HDR-HC3 HDV Handycam, the first model to have either tape or HDD. Great Handycam and very similar to my Sony 4K Handycam a few years later.
Yeah I still own a sony z5 pro hdv/cf card camcorder. The lens and sensor are fantastic!
I used one of these for a bit because I like digitize tapes using a DVD recorder. The only reason I stopped using it was because Sony DVD recorders have a nasty habit of "pausing" recordings when the signal switches or becomes too weak, which meant a lot of "skips" on stuff I captured (mostly Betamax tapes that are getting along in years). I prefer Panasonic DVD Recorders because they have built in TBCs which stops them pausing during problematic spots on the tape.
Couldn't agree more. I've used many DVD recorders over the years and in terms of quality, Panasonic was the gold standard. In addition to the TBC you mentioned with hardly any skips, the bitrates/compression and the features pretty much blew everybody else out of the water. Their built-in noise reduction was fantastic [for the time] and that phenomenal "flexible recording" feature where you could input the recording length and it would calculate the remainder of the disc space and record in the highest possible bitrate. You weren't locked into a few recording "modes" with huge steps in quality.
saw this in my feed and said out loud "yo new vwestlife video lets go" and now my family is looking at me funny
Honestly DVDs SHOULD be obsolete. Blu-Rays and UHD Blu-Rays exist. DVD has been replaced twice over, but still, almost everything comes out on it.
VHS to dvd is easy with the right machine. Combo dvd burner/vhs player unit does it easily for me
"I hate computers." Story of your life, except it's a love-hate relationship only your therapist knows in detail. Well what do you know, VWestlife pinned this comment. Thanks, amigo. :)
Editing unpinned it.
Nice a new video! i love VHS to DVD videos. 10/10 for your channel! Quality stuff we have here.
That is a one neat thing about Japan. There, physical format are above the streaming services👍👏
Yep, DVD rentals are still a common thing.
Japan is living in the year 2000 since 1980
Hey VWestlife. I saw on the news about an earthquake you all just had in you all's area. I just wanted to make sure you're doing alright and made it through that no problems. Thank you!😀
Yes, everything's fine here.
Thank goodness you're doing alright.😀
The Sega Genesis audio sounded better than I'm used to!
I definitely used some of those expensive transfer services in the past before I realized our local public library network has equipment to transfer VHS to DVD and Vinyl to CD that's completely free to use.
It looks to do a really good job of it too, what a nice little thing.
Neat little device!
Whenever I have to do any VHS to DVD transfer work I have a 6 head LG combination VHS/DVD unit sending the signal over composite to a Panasonic BWT-955's internal HDD, which I can then burn out to DVD or even BluRays. 2TB of recording space helps a lot.
I also have a Sony RDR-HXD890 as a backup machine should I need to record from a DV device or S-Video.
i would recommend makemkv rather than vob2mpg as it can automatically merge and cut video parts (without reencoding) also if you use VLC you dont need any additional extentions and codecs ;)
This little thing is genius!
fully agreed 0:26 - DVD and other "optical' s" still have a futhure !
I have one of these devices! I completely intend on using it to transfer all my family VHS tapes to DVD, and then eventually to digital.
I just bought one for 75$ can. I will be able to backup all my family videos. This is awesome :)
The footage you showed was amazing
I’ve gone through a lot of my family’s old tapes recently, a lot recorded when camcorders were new and fascinating objects. I’m torn between the utter uselessness of most of it, and the pure fascination of watching a long ago moment in time captured forever.
@@greatquux i think the appreciation of it can become the enjoyment, thats how its become for me. Also some of the most useless stuff to me feels the most human sometimes.
@willyblon Back in the 70s and 80s when I was using super 8 movie cameras and 35 mm film. I would often catch family members and friends in candid shots. My grandfather once said to me later " I notice you get pictures of people when they're least aware of it. And that's when you should, because you get 'em in their natural element!" So the "useless" type of videos that are being referenced here oftentimes give you a more accurate picture of your inner circle and family members. And i'm glad that I have those type of things in my family Archive.
@@dennman6 beautiful way of putting it, life is beautiful
I gotta get one. I hate messing with the MacBook and 9,000 dongles and external drives to do this!
Just love your uploads !
The early-2000's energy of these videos is mesmerizing. What a weird and sad time it was. Even the video smell of inflation and the impending economic crisis...
I have a Panasonic DVD Burner. I’ve used that to convert VHS. I also buy physical media anytime I can.
This model is common in Malaysia so maybe considering getting this someday to digitise my laserdiscs despite already have some decent capture devices such as BMD Intensity Shuttle, Matrox MX02 MINI and Pinnacle Avid 6 capture device.
Or you could go really crazy and use a Domesday Duplicator along with ld-decode . The YT channel Tech Tangent has a pair of videos going over using those to "rip" Laserdiscs.
I really need to get one of these used, the quality of the recording is so amazing!
And it can do both, PAL and NTSC. So far I've only found it new for 300€ though and that's not a price I'm willing to pay.
It's an amazing product though!
Thank you for this exellent video. I'm trying to buy a second hand vrd-mc5 for $25 in order to convert my dads old VHS and camcorder tapes to digital.
update: I just bought one this morning and its in almost new state. I now have to buy a rewritable DVD and start converting
What a nice machine! And so versatile. Great video!
for mac users simply use handbreak for ripping the created DVD's!
This would have been a really neat device back in the day.
As for DVD ripping, instead of converting VOBs, get a tool called Handbrake. It's open-source, simple to use and needs no external codecs.
Soon some movies are either going to be edited or not available due to not being "correct" so it's best to buy and keep your BR or DVD discs.
I didn't know these could be had so cheaply. I bought one at the thrift store for $40. The price will probably bump up after this video.
Oh man, all those formats...... but...... this seems a good and well thought out device! Like you mentioned at the end of the video, recording on SD, SSD or HDD will make it a perfect solution. To record from an audio source, I use something similar, the Tascam DR7. No computer required and easy as 1,2,3. This older one has a proper audio line-in input newer models don't have. I bought it brand new an paid $120 for it, worth any penny. Quality is outstanding and it is very easy to transfer the files to the computer or other device.
its ok quality on a 32 inch tv DVD is just right on 32-inch sets to maybe 720p plasma TVs
Hmm, hopefully Neener, Neener and Neener simply haven't gotten around to forwarding my royalty check for the "real computer" and "weeny modern computer" phrases. 😛
Years ago, I found a VRD-MC5 at a thrift store brand new in its box. I've only ever used it once, mainly to make sure it worked.
I have this recorder and it's seriously a lot simpler than dealing with computer and capture cards. The only downside is that on one tape I dubbed the macrovision crapped out on home recorded tape. Did you know it has built in music for slideshows?
We are so reliant on streaming now that without the Internet most people would have little to no media at home if it was to go out in say a war. Pretty scary to think about!
Doesn't even have to be a war. It can be (1) expiration of a licensing agreement, or (2) the publisher revoking access to perform a tax write-off on an "underperforming" IP, something happening with increasing frequency nowadays in which case the content essentially vanishes forever in terms of legal access.
(excluding, of course the _"Yarrr"_ method)
Great bit of kit ,all the ones in the uk ebay are listed far more than they will ever sell for .
DVD is a great physical format, However the format encoding and compression by today's standard suck, That's why analog tape formats are better captured in lossless AVI, cropped, upscaled and encoded to modern more efficient codecs.
I fail to see the problem. DVD has twice the resolution of VHS and more than enough bandwidth.
My main camcorder records in HD MPEG2 streams. I literally cant see the difference beyond filesizes vs something like mpg2 and mpg4. I fact that the only benefit I can see between codecs, newer ones, with a huge amount of CPU time, make smaller files.
I capture everything on a DVD recorder, it does everything from TBC to editing. I can rip the MPG2 off the disc if needed and reencode as a smaller mp4 if I really need to otherwise MPG2 is the final format and plays absolutely on everything you can find. Unlike mp4, which is a minefeild of supported or unsupported codes and profiles.
@@dlarge6502 DV has 25Mbps bitrate, MPEG2 is a better codec but there's still some loss when reencoding, more so if the MPEG2 bitrate falls to 4-5Mbps. Even for analog capture it can produce visible loss in quality, especially if the source is noisy. This device is pretty good for people who want to digitize tapes without knowing anything about the process, but it's far from optimal.
@@dlarge6502 No, it has nothing to do with resolution and I never mentioned resolution, VHS is noisy and MPEG-2 compression algorithm gets crazy trying to compress a video with noise which ends up as a hot mess, micro blocking due to luma low dynamic range ...etc. mp4 is just a container, you mean h.264 codec. h.264 is miles better than mpeg-2 if compared for the same bitrate. that's why it was abused and used at very low bitrates that people think it's worse than mpeg-2, It is not. If you are happy with the way you're doing it keep doing so, but it doesn't mean that there aren't better ways out there.
@@dlarge6502 twice the resolution of vhs is not good enough. I am not an audiophile or video snob, but when I watch something on a modern tv, I want it to be at least 1920x1080 , which looks good. i don;t need 4k or 8k, but 480p is just not enough, that was cool on crt tv's 20 years ago, but not anymore
@@dlarge6502 MPEG-2 SD on a DVD is a final format indeed for watching at SD quality. If you need a re-edit you need to go to the original, which in the case of DV will be DV, in the case of HDV will be HDV, in the case of AVCHD will be AVCHD, and in the case of VHS/Hi8 will be a lossless or visually-lossless format with enough bitrate to record all the imperfections of a crappy analog video.
just a question:
the usually DV 60 Min. - has 27 GB data,
how is it possible lossless to transfer to a 4 GB DVD ?
Dvd video has always been a compressed format. So yes, information is lost.
@@rodrigobelinchon2982 that's exactly, what i meant ... - so better store the data on a DV if it is availble !
@@VinylPro What do you mean? You have a DV original recorded by the camera by default, and additionally, you can choose to transfer it to DVD for a number of reasons- Like not having to always use the camera as a player for instance.
If you want the best quality, you can still pick up Firewire cards that work on Windows 11, I got one for £15 on Amazon to rip footage from my Sony PDW-510P broadcast camera.
I think reading comprehension was switched off for a few commenters today 😂
It's not possible for it to transfer losslessly from dv to dvd as you recognised, it's more for convenience on somewhat of a budget rather than maintaining perfect 1:1 quality
Most people would be unlikely to care or even notice the difference between a raw dv capture and a dvd copy, and that's what these devices are banking on
I acquired one of these out of an old ridgid seesnake drain camera I bought years ago it’s in a pelican case and has its own power supply using a sealed lead acid
I used one of these to covert my 8mm tapes to dvds. Worked great!