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I've had my Hitachie 8mm camcorder for the past twelve years and its finally bit the dust. I have tons of 8mm video that I would like to transfer over to DVD format so I can still watch it for years to come. I've herd the 8mm tapes have a shelf life and I wouldn't want to loose all those memmories.

2006-12-09 09:33:11 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Consumer Electronics Camcorders

4 answers

Go to your local Staples and inquire. If they do not do it themselves they will be able to tell you where to go for this service or what to purchase to do it yourself if possible.

2006-12-09 09:37:50 · answer #1 · answered by seblexie 3 · 0 0

Do yourself a favor and invest in a Stand alone DVD recorder. The best one out here are the ones made by panasonic as the newest models will record on ANY DVD format. Use the S-Video cable ( not the yellow RCA pluG TYPE) for optimum video signal transfer if your camera has it, otherwise your stuck with the yellow video plug and that just gives you standard quality. There's no need to get a fancy computer with a DVD recorder drive as it takes too long and right now you want to just preserrve your stuff. you can get fancy with editing later. The DVD recorders record in real time so you dont have to wait while your computer "thinks" about things while its transferring the data. Plus they are easier to operate ( exactly like A VCR) than the computer drives. At this point, neither DVD+ or DVD-R have a far superior edge over the other unless you are recording at the slower speeds. With how cheap blank DVD's are these days, get the large bulk packs and record at the XP (best) or SP ( 2 HR) speeds. using the slowere speeds will degrade your video. DO NOT Use the 6 hour or slower speeds as your video will look even grainier than your master. The Panasonic models have special digital circuitry that makes you DVD copy look as crisp as the original, unlike others that will record the image at one generation away from the original as if you were making copies of your tapes on another tape. Hope this helps

2006-12-09 09:45:13 · answer #2 · answered by Brad/Diana B 5 · 0 0

you opt for a definite projector with a 4 blade shutter. the time-honored projectors with a three blade shutter could have a dismal bar working down the photograph. After a seek on transfering action picture to video, maximum website say to easily checklist the projected photograph and alter the cost of the projector whether it relatively is adjustable to end the dark bar. the priority with that's which you would be able to no longer synchronize the projector thoroughly. The dark bar will seem and in basic terms pass slower. Adjusting the cost of the projector will additionally decelerate or velocity up the action picture. The strikes might then look unusual, like the previous silent action pictures you have seen. The strikes look jerky. possibly the terrific way is to easily take the flicks right down to a specialist and enable them to do it. loads of action picture coming up shops grant this provider. i don't know what the cost could be, however the tip result could be extra suitable.

2016-10-14 08:48:23 · answer #3 · answered by scafuri 4 · 0 0

If your computer has enough space you can doit on your own. get pinole software, then get a usb that fits into your camera. edit your your videos with adobe (dont remember) and transfer it with the software to a dvd-r(w)

2006-12-09 09:40:21 · answer #4 · answered by h-townguy 3 · 0 0

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