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Thread: Copying VHS to DVD
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2nd February 2010, 08:02 PM #1
Copying VHS to DVD
I am in the process of copying my videos onto DVD. I have done most of them but some have some sort of copy protection which stops me from copying them. Some of these titles are unavailable on DVD and are starting to wear out. I think the protection is called Macrovision. How do you remove the protection, I imagine I need to buy some hardware etc. but what kind? Anyone been able to copy protected VHS videos successfully?
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2nd February 2010, 08:08 PM #2Senior Member
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Hi.
Put "remove macrovision" into Google.
"The training of the eyes to know when an edge is perfectly straight or a surface is flat, free from winding, and straight, is a very important part of a lad's training."
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2nd February 2010, 08:31 PM #3
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2nd February 2010, 08:44 PM #4
Macrovision. Silicon chip / electronics australia had a project some years back called dr video, should still be available as a kit from altronics or jaycar. this will get rid of the macrovision.
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2nd February 2010, 10:17 PM #5Deceased
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I have copied some dancing videos by playing the videos on tv and using my camera to record them to another video machine. I played them in a darkened room and copied the sound direct into the camera.
There was some loss of quality but it was acceptable to me as I could clearly follow and see the demonstrations.
Peter.
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2nd February 2010, 10:19 PM #6
have a talk to the jaycar salesmen
Ashore
The trouble with life is there's no background music.
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2nd February 2010, 10:50 PM #7Senior Member
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3rd February 2010, 05:03 PM #8
Why not play the videos on a vcr and copy using a dvd recorder.
Just a thought,
Keith.
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3rd February 2010, 05:38 PM #9GOLD MEMBER
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The other day I described to my daughter how to find something in the garage by saying "It's right near my big saw". A few minutes later she came back to ask: "Do you mean the black one, the green one, or the blue one?".
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5th February 2010, 12:06 PM #10
Thanks guys. This is going to be more difficult than I first thought. Ultimately, I might just do as Sturdee has done and use a video camera to record.
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5th February 2010, 12:38 PM #11GOLD MEMBER
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I am still looking into it, but it seems as if it might be possible to do with MythTV on a computer with a capture card. You would need to have a spare computer, or a large enough hard drive to run an extra partition as MythTV runs on Linux. You would also need to make sure your capture device has drivers for linux available.
PeterThe other day I described to my daughter how to find something in the garage by saying "It's right near my big saw". A few minutes later she came back to ask: "Do you mean the black one, the green one, or the blue one?".
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5th February 2010, 07:37 PM #12
Thanks Ashore, the part I think will do the job is
DVD Maker and USB 2.0 AV Grabber - Jaycar Electronics
Costs around $50.
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6th February 2010, 10:55 PM #13
MPEG onto dvds
Bought the part from Jaycar and it gets the video onto the computer but it saves it in a MPEG format which I can't use on my dvd recorder (with hard drive). So I can play the video with Media Player but can't get it onto a dvd .
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7th February 2010, 10:21 AM #14
but you have a file and there are lots of programs that will convert mpeg to dvd format.
If you got Nero with your computer, you might have nero vision. But if you want to convert it to divx for your dvd recorder, you'll need something else, but there are millions of those programs around.Mick
avantguardian
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