| You can archive old home movies onto DVD without ever
touching a PC. We explore your options and offer some tips on doing
it right.
In the 25th week of my wife's pregnancy, she had
an ultrasound taken at a facility where you can get a videotape
of the event. If ever there was a visual that I wanted to last,
this was it. But instead I had a tape. Videotape degrades with time.
It wears down with each playback. So I needed to get this little
keepsake onto DVD, preferably before the kid was ready to enter
high school.
Because doing the job is easier
than ever, now's the time to preserve VHS memories like this one--and
everyday home movies of beach weekends, recitals, and parties--by
converting them to DVD. Compared with tape, a DVD captures better
picture and sound and does not degenerate in quality from repeated
play. Plus, with a DVD, you can insert chapter marks to access a
part of the story quickly. VHS-to-DVD conversion has been possible
via the PC for a few years, but the latest DVD recorders offer a
quick and convenient route to digital video.
I tried several options for transferring
VHS tape to DVD without PC: a GoVideo all-in-one combination unit
consisting of a DVD recorder and a VCR; a Sharp DVD recorder with
a built-in hard drive; and YesVideo, a mail-in service that handles
the conversion for you. My conclusion: In general, you can't beat
DVD recorders for hassle-free dubbing, but some units lack certain
advanced video editing tools that PC products offer.
Copy That
Now that prices have fallen to
between $250 and $800, DVD recorders seem poised to replace VCRs.
The basic method for transferring video from VHS to DVD using standard
equipment isn't complicated. You connect an RCA cable from the VCR's
video and audio outputs to the DVD recorder's inputs, press Play
on the VCR, and press Record on the DVD recorder.
You don't need any additional
gear such as a PC video capture card, because the DVD recorder has
all the necessary capture and conversion features. Unfortunately
there's no way to speed up this process: Every minute of tape takes
a minute to record. And I had a hard time syncing the recording
as closely as I wanted to, using the basic method. The devices I
tried took from 2 to 10 seconds to start after I pressed the Record
button, so timing required some finesse. Inevitably I cut off the
beginning or got snow at the end.
A combo DVD recorder/VCR, such
as GoVideo's $399 VR4940, solves that problem. Because both devices
are integrated into a single box, dubbing becomes a simple two-click
process: Press Copy on the remote control, and then confirm
that you want to do it. This particular model will even stop recording
when the videotape ends, if you haven't already pressed Stop. And
you can copy video from DVD to VHS just as easily.
In addition to home movies, you
may have a large library of commercially produced films sitting
on the shelf. So why not turn your Star Wars VHS tape into
a DVD, too? The copy-protection features on most VHS tapes prevent
this. When you try to record a protected tape, you'll receive an
error message and get a disc full of blue screen.
How easy is it to improve your
movie? If you use a DVD-RW or DVD+RW disc, you'll be able to edit
the material on the disc by using Video Recording mode; if you format
a DVD-RW disc in VR mode, however, the disc will work only in a
player that supports DVD-RW.
VR mode permits editing only
in the most liberal sense of the word. Working with the GoVideo
recorder's on-screen display and remote control, I was lucky to
edit material within a second of what I wanted. By comparison, when
you edit video on a PC, software allows you to trim scenes by a
fraction of a second if you wish.
You may also want to break your
disc into chapters, like those that you see on a rented DVD movie.
With most units, you have the option to do this manually or to insert
a chapter automatically every so often--say, every 10 minutes. You
can change the order of scenes in VR mode by making a chapter playlist;
this kind of editing function is far easier to do on a PC, though,
because you drag and drop instead of fiddling with a display and
a remote.
Hard-Drive Option
If you're interested in doing
a fair amount of editing instead of just making direct copies, consider
purchasing a DVD recorder that has a built-in hard drive, such as
Sharp's $800 DV-HR300U. With this kind of recorder, you transfer
video from VHS to the hard drive before burning it to disc.
Using the Sharp DV-HR300U's 80GB
hard drive, you can do the same kind of editing as in VR mode on
a rewritable disc. But the main advantage here is that you can burn
the result to a DVD-R or DVD+R disc; both are affordable, write-once
formats that play in almost any current DVD player.
I ran into many of the same editing
difficulties with the Sharp device as I had with GoVideo's; I had
trouble controlling the timing, and using the remote control (rather
than a mouse) wasn't easy at times.
On the bright side, a hard-drive
recorder makes creating multiple copies of a home movie a snap.
As the eager grandparents-to-be clamored for copies of our ultrasound
movie, I cued it up again from the hard drive instead of redubbing
the entire thing.
The Sharp DV-HR300U offered significantly
better menu options than GoVideo's unit did. Thanks to movies, we're
accustomed to attractive visual menus on our DVDs, with thumbnail
pictures that show the start of chapters. But on DVD-R videos that
I created using GoVideo's recorder, the menus were text-only (though
VR mode did allow thumbnails). The Sharp recorder created menus
with thumbnails that I could easily select from any frame in the
chapter; but the result did not look as polished as a professional
DVD.
Speaking of polish, I had to
choose a quality level to record at. Settings differed, but the
main modes available were SP (Standard Play) and LP (Long Play);
the Sharp unit offered several other choices as well.
SP mode gave me about 2 hours
of recording time; in LP mode, I could squeeze in 4 hours. When
using DVD-R and DVD-RW discs, I could see the difference between
the two speeds in copied home movies, but it wasn't glaring. Backgrounds
seemed slightly rougher in LP mode, and facial features were less
sharp. My goal was to preserve family events for posterity, though,
so it wasn't worthwhile to pack in an extra 2 hours; instead, I
just used another DVD-R disc. (I bought a five-pack for $10.)
Mail It In
Of course, you could pay someone
else to do VHS conversion work for you. But the service doesn't
always come cheap: One photo shop in Berkeley, California, offered
to make me a DVD of a 1.5-hour VHS tape for $35, with no chapter
stops. For any actual editing (including chapters), prices started
at $75 an hour. A store located in San Francisco told me that it
transfers tapes for $15 per hour, plus $2.50 per title or chapter
insert. At those rates, you might as well buy your own recorder.
Mail-in services, however, offer
a more affordable route. A company such as YesVideo will
create a DVD copy of a VHS tape for just $25, including chapter
stops. I sent in the ultrasound tape and some vacation travel footage
to Yes-Video. The video transferred to DVD sounded and looked as
good as the source. And the company did a pretty good job of inserting
chapters, too, although at the end of the disc the technician missed
several obvious spots to put new chapters. The disc comes in a nice-looking
package, with a case that displays a thumbnail from each chapter.
It's a straight copy, though.
YesVideo doesn't edit out the bad parts, like interference, on the
tape. And completing the job takes up to two weeks from the time
you drop off the tape, whereas local stores perform conversions
in a day or two.
Your Best Choice
All in all, which option will
be smartest for you? If you have relatively few tapes that you want
to convert, a service like YesVideo is the way to go. Just be sure
to make a copy of your priceless movie before you send the original
on its way. (If you don't have a second VCR, try to borrow one.)
If you expect to work with tapes
often, you can't beat the convenience of a combination recorder
like GoVideo's for producing straight copies of VHS movies. But
if you need to perform basic editing and make multiple copies, moving
up to a DVD recorder with a hard drive makes sense, especially if
you also plan to use it to record TV shows.
After the converting is done,
you can relax and relive your favorite memories--without fear that
they'll fade away.
Video-to-DVD Transfer Tips
Follow these strategies to get
the best results from your VHS-to-DVD conversion.
Use a good VCR:
Your DVD can look only as good as the feed from the VHS player.
There's nothing you can do to improve the quality of the VHS tape,
but you can use a high-quality, four-head VCR. If you have an older
model, upgrade, or borrow a better unit from a friend or a neighbor.
Adjust tracking first:
Before pressing Record on the DVD player, make sure you've adjusted
the tracking on the VCR. Doing so helps eliminate distortion. Many
VCRs automatically calibrate the tracking when you play a videotape,
so watch out for on-screen displays, which the DVD player will record.
Use Standard Play quality:
If your goal is to preserve priceless memories, don't skimp
on the recording quality in order to pack more video onto one disc.
You can find DVD-R or DVD+R discs for just $2 if you shop around.
Use DVD-R or DVD+R format
when possible: Most DVD players can read these discs.
Not all players can read rewritable discs, especially if they've
been formatted in VR mode.
Finalize the disc:
If you don't finalize--an option usually available in the recorder's
setup menu--when you've finished converting, the disc won't play
in other DVD players.
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