On Sat, 30 Oct 2004, Martin Samuelsson wrote: > On Friday 29 October 2004 23:34, scott wrote: > > Just tried with and without -x on the lstest.avi file at > > Playing that file in slow motion, I'd have to agree with Richard: It's most > likely a problem with the VCR not feeding the digitizer a clean enough > signal. Unfortunately, VCRs do that by design.
Yes, the signal from VCRs is unsteady (well, junk) at times. The condition of the tape can also result in a degraded/unstable signal. What you need is a image stabilizer or TBC (TimeBaseCorrector). I use an earlier model of the Sima SCC unit (now replaced by the SCC-2): http://www.simacorp.com/products/item.ep.html?id=478 regenerates the sync and colorburst info (and I see that the SCC-2 supports both PAL and NTSC - earlier models were NTSC only). A pleasant side effect of a stabilizer/TBC is that it strips out the macrovision crud that can also confuse capture cards. You can also adjust the color/hue/contrast/sharpness/brightness for those tapes that are in very bad condition. TBCs can be found at BH Photo: http://www.bhphotovideo.com/ put TBC into the search box and you'll get ~4 pages of equipment. Some of which is VERY expensive, but some is more reasonable - you can get a single channel TBC for $290 or so. Cheers, Steven Schultz ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by: Sybase ASE Linux Express Edition - download now for FREE LinuxWorld Reader's Choice Award Winner for best database on Linux. http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=5588&alloc_id=12065&op=click _______________________________________________ Mjpeg-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/mjpeg-users