![]() And tapes of such important gravity deserve premium treatment. In fact, I strongly recommend that you take time to do a couple of realtime checks throughout the length on BOTH clips of pairs of captures (or all three of triplets, if possible) - maybe not all of them obviously, but enough regularly, because there is the likelihood of data dropouts, which may not be evident enough to stop capture, but might still be there. That port controller may have some underlying combined throughput limit. Calculate your individual and cumulative bandwidths and capacities. But each thing you add to the overhead takes you steps closer to something crashing/freezing/skipping. PC: Windows 10, AMD FX-6300, 16GB DDR3 RAM and 2GB gtx 950 GPU It should also work with 3 cameras, right? I have another Digital8 camera that I could plug in when I get another Firewire cable to do the experiment. (takes 25 minutes for every hour of DV video). MP4, which I do with Adobe Encoder, a very practical program because I load all the files together and do the process in one row. I save the files directly on 2TB USB External Hard Drives, the DV file in. The only strange thing is that in one of the two windows the vumeter does not work during capture nor does it emit sound even though the mute option is unchecked, but then in the final. There was no problem, the capture was successful in both cases. ![]() I connected the two cameras at the same time, opened two Scenalizer windows and correctly in each one I was able to select each camera separately and started the transfer with both cameras. This file are videos of the judgments initiated in 2001. Context: it is a work for a Public Archive for the Conservation of Memory on the crimes against humanity that occurred during the last military dictatorship in Argentina (1976-1983). I'm already doing 150 Mini-DVs with a single camera and I still have 600 left, so I need to work with more than one camera at a time. I will tell you about my experience transferring 2 Mini-DV tapes at the same time. Takes all of a few seconds to do a search through the catalog tool and then go get and insert the disc. I already have had such a setup for a decade, and I've got about 850 CDRs, 200 DVDRs and a couple scores of BDRs and various RE/Ws. And a simple catalogging app that logs discs's files is a no brainer. Personally, I would think for archiving, BDR is an excellent inexpensive alternative, or maybe additional backup option. If one were wanting to do editing and/or archiving using HDs (as opposed to cloud, tape, optical disc, etc), then yes 2 8TB drives would be a good idea. I'd say, if each tape is full, and recorded at SP speed, the OP would end up with 13GB * 600 = 7800GB or ~7.5TB. Those aren't likely though, in this scenario.Īlso, perhaps the association of VHS SP speed recording of 2hrs to fill a tape was carried over here. So though the most common tapes only hold 60 minutes' worth (or 90 if using LP), there are some larger cassettes available for some prosumer cams, which can give you up to 2 hrs (perhaps beyond). I think what means is that 25Mbps for 2 Hrs = ~22-26GB (rule of thumb = 13GB/hr).
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