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| UK Digital Video (uk.rec.video.digital) For the discussion of all aspects of digital video, including all digital video formats, camera use, editing, post production & all associated equipment, hardware and software. Advertising is prohibited. |
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#1
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| Hello Commonly, would it be possible to transfer a recorded material from a miniDV camcorders to my Pioneer DVR-645H-S wich is equipped with hard drive? And if yes, would there be any quality compromises, since I would transfer from a tape onto a hard drive? This recorder has a DV terminal IEEE1394. Thank you |
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#2
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| "P." wrote in message ... Hello Commonly, would it be possible to transfer a recorded material from a miniDV camcorders to my Pioneer DVR-645H-S wich is equipped with hard drive? And if yes, would there be any quality compromises, since I would transfer from a tape onto a hard drive? This recorder has a DV terminal IEEE1394. Thank you Methinks it will record as MPEG so some lose from the compression |
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#3
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| "P." wrote in message ... Commonly, would it be possible to transfer a recorded material from a miniDV camcorders to my Pioneer DVR-645H-S wich is equipped with hard drive? This recorder has a DV terminal IEEE1394. The Pioneer should happily accept DV format material via the DV-in terminal. You'll need the relevant cable to connect camcorder to the Pioneer unit. [ 'Firewire' / IEEE1394 / 'i-Link' ] And if yes, would there be any quality compromises, since I would transfer from a tape onto a hard drive? As I understand it, the Pioneer unit will transcode the standard-definition DV video to MPEG-2 (the same format as used on DVD-Video) _even_ if you're only recording to the hard disc. This will inevitably mean a small drop in quality for a couple of reasons: - There is an inherent quality drop when transcoding involves one or more 'lossy' formats; - The transcoding is performed in real-time which - even with the best hardware video encoders - is still only a single-pass process, meaning there is no 'second chance' for the encoder to go back and encode the picture more accurately or efficiently. Hope this helps. Ed Fielden -- www.fielden.tv |
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#4
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| "Ed Fielden" wrote in message The Pioneer should happily accept DV format material via the DV-in terminal. You'll need the relevant cable to connect camcorder to the Pioneer unit. [ 'Firewire' / IEEE1394 / 'i-Link' ] Thank you for the help. I decided to probably buy Sony DCR-HC96 camcorder. This camcorder should also be able to be conected to Pioneer for video transfer? I haven't managet to find this out on my own... Best regards |
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#5
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| "P." wrote in message ... "Ed Fielden" wrote in message The Pioneer should happily accept DV format material via the DV-in terminal. You'll need the relevant cable to connect camcorder to the Pioneer unit. [ 'Firewire' / IEEE1394 / 'i-Link' ] Thank you for the help. I decided to probably buy Sony DCR-HC96 camcorder. This camcorder should also be able to be conected to Pioneer for video transfer? I haven't managet to find this out on my own... The specs for the DCR-HC96 do include DV-out via 'i-Link' (Sony's name for the IEEE1394 interface) so should link up just fine with any other DV-capable device. You just need to make sure to buy a cable to connect them! For the devices in question you will most likely need a 4-pin to 4-pin Firewire/IEEE1394 cable (best to double-check after you get the stuff). If in need of help to identify the connectors/sockets, there are a few pictures (and some background to the FireWire interface system) at Wikipedia ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FireWire ). Ed Fielden -- www.fielden.tv |
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