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Recording HD Signals
It must have been late at night that I put my address on line instead of
asking a question. Well, it even happens to old dogs like me! My question: what are various options for recording HD signals in HD or SD format? One possibility would be to use an HD to analog converter and then using a regular VCR. Cass |
Recording HD Signals
"Cass Lewart" wrote in message
... It must have been late at night that I put my address on line instead of asking a question. Well, it even happens to old dogs like me! My question: what are various options for recording HD signals in HD or SD format? One possibility would be to use an HD to analog converter and then using a regular VCR. Cass ========================== Most HD receivers (including sat and cable) have ability to output 480i. That is all that is needed to record to standard VCR or DVD-R. You need buy nothing more. |
Recording HD Signals
"Cass Lewart" wrote in message
... It must have been late at night that I put my address on line instead of asking a question. Well, it even happens to old dogs like me! My question: what are various options for recording HD signals in HD or SD format? One possibility would be to use an HD to analog converter and then using a regular VCR. Cass You might have a look at the Myhd PC card, it records over-the-air signals very nicely. http://www.digitalconnection.com/Pro...deo/mdp130.asp |
Recording HD Signals
On Sat, 14 Apr 2007 08:17:59 -0700, Richard C. wrote:
On Sat 14 Apr 2007 08:17:59 -0700, Richard C. wrote: "Cass Lewart" wrote in message ... It must have been late at night that I put my address on line instead of asking a question. Well, it even happens to old dogs like me! My question: what are various options for recording HD signals in HD or SD format? One possibility would be to use an HD to analog converter and then using a regular VCR. Cass ========================== Most HD receivers (including sat and cable) have ability to output 480i. That is all that is needed to record to standard VCR or DVD-R. You need buy nothing more. Also, some cable/satellite boxes as well as TV models have firewire (ieee1394) ports. Might need activation by the company at the head-end. Hook it up to a firewire-equipped computer (PC, Linux, Mac), run a freeware or shareware app with the features you need, several can automatically change channels according to schedules. The firewire data ends up as an exact copy of the digital stream, so you won't lose quality or extra audio / subtitle tracks etc. that the head-end is sending. Just for recording, a computer does not need a fast CPU, just gobs of disk space, esp. if the stream is HD. If your TV has firewire, you can play back the recording through those ports w/o loss of quality, here you still do not need a fast CPU as the TV is doing the actual playing. You only need fast CPU for watching the recording on the computer itself. Macintosh computers are super-easy to use in this regard. Apple has published open source code for working firewire stream recorders & players (they invented firewire, after all ;) ). Other people have taken that code and came out with enhanced apps, such as iRecord http://www.ammesset.com/software/irecord/. For Macs and OTA there are the devices made by Elgato http://www.elgato.com/ and Miglia http://www.miglia.com/. Elgato also makes software that can handle many other third-party devices that are normally PC-only. The only thing all of these can't support is when the "broadcast flag" says "copy once" or "copy never". The firewire stream becomes scrambled if the device or recording app can't honour the DTCP/5C handshaking. This is a topic I have warned and written to a few trusted radio talk shows; I hope to soon go public with my warnings for a wider audience (such as this newsgroup) well before the FCC analogue cut-off date I hope. Thanks... :) |
Recording HD Signals
On Sat, 14 Apr 2007 13:27:11 +0000, Cass Lewart wrote:
My question: what are various options for recording HD signals in HD or SD format? There are lots of ways depending on the HD signal source. OTA ATSC can be recorded direct to a PC (with tuner(s)), HD-VCR, and comsumer grade PVR's. behind an ATSC receiver, you can record the HD signal as an SD signal on any VCR/dvr that excepts 480i input. Cable and sat gets a lot more complicated depending on many things when it comes to HD, but most (if not all cable/sat boxes will ouput 480i so you can use any recorder to record HD in SD format. For HD with cable or sat I'd recommend using their equipment as it's the cheapest route. there are cablecard ready recorders for cable but they are expensive. And it gets a lot more complicated as for clear qam, firewire, etc. You need to ask about a specify application for a definative answer. -- Want the ultimate in free OTA SD/HDTV Recorder? http://mythtv.org http://mysettopbox.tv/knoppmyth.html Usenet alt.video.ptv.mythtv My server http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php HD Tivo S3 compared http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/mythtivo.htm |
Recording HD Signals
One option no one seemed to mention are JVC's DVHS recorders. They
record HD to DVHS tape. One advantage of this is you can save up a nice collection. I've got over 200 movies laying arround. Not quite sure how you can do that with any of the Hard Drive based solutions. You do need a fire wire connection, but from your post I already gathered you have one. Last I checked (about a month ago) you can find the recorders online at many vendors, price was averaging in the mid 4 hundreds. Though they would like you to buy special D-VHS tapes any Svhs tape can be converted buy drilling a hole on the bottom on the opposite side as the one already there to tell your recorder it's a S tape.. One trick to be aware of, due to paranoia on behalf of the movie industry they had to design the recorders such that you can't set the timer to record the firewire input. But a quick fix for that is to buy a VCR programmer remote. Picked one up at radio shack for 10 bucks, just leave your vcr set to firewire input & the programmer will turn it on & off when you wish. Also someone pointed out 2 programs to me awhile back that allow you to capture your hd via firewire to your computer (and out put back to a DVHS recorder if you wish) . A program called CapDVHS does the capture, another called HDTVtoMPEG2 allows you to edit it & archive to other media. I've downloaded both, but haven't tried them yet, next time i see something on a comercial channel i really want to save i may be able to tell you more. On 14 Apr 2007 13:27:11 GMT, (Cass Lewart) wrote: It must have been late at night that I put my address on line instead of asking a question. Well, it even happens to old dogs like me! My question: what are various options for recording HD signals in HD or SD format? One possibility would be to use an HD to analog converter and then using a regular VCR. Cass |
Recording HD Signals
On Apr 15, 6:26 am, NightWing wrote:
One option no one seemed to mention are JVC's DVHS recorders. They record HD to DVHS tape. One advantage of this is you can save up a nice collection. I've got over 200 movies laying arround. Not quite sure how you can do that with any of the Hard Drive based solutions. You do need a fire wire connection, but from your post I already gathered you have one. For me the problem with tape is the tape and all its limits. To archive with my hard drive systems you dump to DVD. I use MythTV and ReplayTV. I get the data from the replay via ethernet connection. But there's very little I find worth archiving that isn't at the library on DVD. Last I checked (about a month ago) you can find the recorders online at many vendors, price was averaging in the mid 4 hundreds. Though they would like you to buy special D-VHS tapes any Svhs tape can be converted buy drilling a hole on the bottom on the opposite side as the one already there to tell your recorder it's a S tape.. One trick to be aware of, due to paranoia on behalf of the movie industry they had to design the recorders such that you can't set the timer to record the firewire input. But a quick fix for that is to buy a VCR programmer remote. Picked one up at radio shack for 10 bucks, just leave your vcr set to firewire input & the programmer will turn it on & off when you wish. Now THAT is interesting. Does you deck recognize or respond to the "copy once" or "copy never" flags? Also someone pointed out 2 programs to me awhile back that allow you to capture your hd via firewire to your computer (and out put back to a DVHS recorder if you wish) . A program called CapDVHS does the capture, another called HDTVtoMPEG2 allows you to edit it & archive to other media. I've downloaded both, but haven't tried them yet, next time i see something on a comercial channel i really want to save i may be able to tell you more. I know someone who records HD cable shows onto a sony HD disk recorder, then dumps to d-vhs to keep the disk from filling up. Works for him. |
Recording HD Signals
One trick to be aware of, due to paranoia on behalf of the movie industry they had to design the recorders such that you can't set the timer to record the firewire input. But a quick fix for that is to buy a VCR programmer remote. Picked one up at radio shack for 10 bucks, just leave your vcr set to firewire input & the programmer will turn it on & off when you wish. Now THAT is interesting. Does you deck recognize or respond to the "copy once" or "copy never" flags? So far I've not seen any sign of it. |
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