2
1
I have a number of old VHS tapes, as well as some analog 8mm tapes. I still have a working VCR, as well as the camcorder that recorded the tapes. I'd like to convert these on a Mac (MacBook Pro) - what do I need in order to digitize these tapes?
2
1
I have a number of old VHS tapes, as well as some analog 8mm tapes. I still have a working VCR, as well as the camcorder that recorded the tapes. I'd like to convert these on a Mac (MacBook Pro) - what do I need in order to digitize these tapes?
0
I do this with a cheap FireWire gadget called Dazzle Hollywood - it takes analogue video and converts it to FireWire and then to iMovie it just looks like you have a digital camcorder connected. This is a pretty old device though, so there may be newer/better options out there, e.g. various products from ElGato ?
0
If your camcorder has a firewire port, there may be a switch on the camera to switch it to output and connect it to the Mac.
Alternatively you could use An Elgato product and as a bonus get a TV tuner too.
As @PaulR mentioned, Dazzle also has firewire or USB video capture dongles.
No digital output on the camcorder - it's about 10 years old. – chris – 2010-06-15T14:30:52.120
0
It's called a USB video capture card. Capture cards rather than TV tuners are hard to find. Here's one that I've tested:
and another I have not:
The software included is VideoGlide, which also supports other devices such as EasyCap.
1
The El Gato video capture (http://www.elgato.com/elgato/na/mainmenu/products/Video-Capture/product1.en.html) seems to work, and has the bonus of working with both Windows and Mac.
– chris – 2010-10-13T16:32:34.640@chris: thanks for confirming that - it may be time to retire my old Dazzle Holywood box and get something better such as the El Gato solution. – Paul R – 2010-10-14T08:01:38.597