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#1
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I have Hauppauge WINTV PVR-150 MCE installed on my computer and am
using WinTV 2000 to transfer video from a VCR into a digital format. Although this works fine if I am in attendance, it is another story if I leave the transfer running through the night. This morning I checked the video file and after 7 hours of recording the size was 12GB, leaving just a few 100MB free on my hard disk. Had it gone on for much longer my hard disk would have been completely full, and my PC might well have fallen over - obviously with such a massive file and no disk space left, it is not possible to edit it either after recording,; so this is not a helpful situation to be in . As many of my VHS tapes are guitar instruction films, they are only 45 minutes to an hour long. I would like WinTV 2000 to transfer video for a set amount of time (for example an hour, 2 hours, 3 hours) and then stop. What is the easiest way to accomplish this? Many thanks. |
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#2
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"QH" wrote in message ups.com... I have Hauppauge WINTV PVR-150 MCE installed on my computer and am using WinTV 2000 to transfer video from a VCR into a digital format. Although this works fine if I am in attendance, it is another story if I leave the transfer running through the night. This morning I checked the video file and after 7 hours of recording the size was 12GB, leaving just a few 100MB free on my hard disk. Had it gone on for much longer my hard disk would have been completely full, and my PC might well have fallen over - obviously with such a massive file and no disk space left, it is not possible to edit it either after recording,; so this is not a helpful situation to be in . As many of my VHS tapes are guitar instruction films, they are only 45 minutes to an hour long. I would like WinTV 2000 to transfer video for a set amount of time (for example an hour, 2 hours, 3 hours) and then stop. What is the easiest way to accomplish this? Click the "OTR" button (One Touch Record) and keep clicking. You will see the duration of recording time incrementing by 15 min's per click. Get to the desired time and walk away! KW |
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#3
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"Ken Ward" wrote in message ...
"QH" wrote in message ups.com... I have Hauppauge WINTV PVR-150 MCE installed on my computer and am using WinTV 2000 to transfer video from a VCR into a digital format. Although this works fine if I am in attendance, it is another story if I leave the transfer running through the night. This morning I checked the video file and after 7 hours of recording the size was 12GB, leaving just a few 100MB free on my hard disk. Had it gone on for much longer my hard disk would have been completely full, and my PC might well have fallen over - obviously with such a massive file and no disk space left, it is not possible to edit it either after recording,; so this is not a helpful situation to be in . As many of my VHS tapes are guitar instruction films, they are only 45 minutes to an hour long. I would like WinTV 2000 to transfer video for a set amount of time (for example an hour, 2 hours, 3 hours) and then stop. What is the easiest way to accomplish this? Click the "OTR" button (One Touch Record) and keep clicking. You will see the duration of recording time incrementing by 15 min's per click. Get to the desired time and walk away! You can also install and use the Scheduler utility that came on your Hauppauge CD, or available on their website. Make sure Windows' Task Scheduler service is enabled and active (right-click My Computer/Manage/Services).. set it to startup type "automatic", if it's not already. I'd recommend using the latest version of Scheduler from their website, as several nasty bugs have been fixed. If you always start your transfers manually, Ken's suggestion is easier and should work fine. |
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#4
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Fantastic. So simple and it just what I need. Many thanks to both
posters. Unfortunately I bought a surplus stock 150 card and it did not come with a CD and I have kind of being flying blind - (I downloaded WinTV myself). Thanks again. QH |
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#5
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Fantastic. So simple and it just what I need. Many thanks to both
posters. Unfortunately I bought a surplus stock 150 card and it did not come with a CD and I have kind of being flying blind - (I downloaded WinTV myself). Thanks again. QH |
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#6
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Fantastic. So simple and it just what I need. Many thanks to both
posters. Unfortunately I bought a surplus stock 150 card and it did not come with a CD and I have kind of being flying blind - (I downloaded WinTV myself). Thanks again. QH |
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#7
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I believe QH is extremely pleased :-)
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#8
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On 14 Sep 2005 02:12:31 -0700, "QH" wrote:
Fantastic. So simple and it just what I need. Many thanks to both posters. Unfortunately I bought a surplus stock 150 card and it did not come with a CD and I have kind of being flying blind - (I downloaded WinTV myself). Thanks again. QH Go to the card manufacturer's site (Hauppauge?) and look under "support" to see if they post the manual in a PDF format. I've done this for various kinds of older equipment and have only failed to find the manual a couple of tmes. I now also do this for all new equipment I buy, as soon as possible afer purchase. The files go into a specific set of subdirectories under Manuals\vendorname\productname. Then they're available for browsing online or reprinting if the original hardcopy goes south. Where a produce has firmware update capability, the firmware files go in a Firmware.version subdirectory under the product. That way, If I need to, I can fall back to an earlier version if the new one turns out to have problems. For what it's worth, I recently downloaded a 200-page manual for a download-only software product. I dropped the user-manual file onto a CF card and took it to Kinko's for printing. I'm not sure where the volume discount kicked in, but it was long enough that the price dropped from 8.5 cents a page to 7 cents a page. Also interesting -- I asked about the price difference betrween single- and double-sided printing. They were both the same. I had thought that single-sided would be more expensive due to paper cost, but I guess they're more concerned with toner cost and wear on the machines. |
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#9
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