ofcourse one must learnĪfterwards i applied some other plugins to make the recording better.Īfter that - I put the sound file through WinAmp with a few plugins of I did thatįOUR times to reduce the noises to a minimum. Put it through Sonic Sound Forge with Noise reduction 2.0. Took that mono recording with tons of annoying background noise and Some very complicated (and sometimes expensive) tools. Into a 5.1 dolby surround sound using some very simple tools, next to Same goes for Audio - I took that Mono VHS recording and converted it
Think it looks much better if i put it on 720X480. I had a recording fromīerlin that had alot of noise, but TMPG cleaned it right up. Miracles on some not-so-great VHS recordings. Plugins such as the TMPG Encoder Noise Reduction can really do Material can output great results in the end. I've learn in the last few months that even a bad quality source 8 voice & voicemailĭo not send me unsolicited commercial email. I've done some Google searches and found only a few references to tweaking the MPEG-2 encoding settings to get the most amount of video on w/o sacrificing enough quality to make the video look worse than the VHS original.ĭoes anybody have any recommendations about what some decent settings are for the data rate and frame size? Also, a data rate of 8000Kbps on a video DVD would be overkill, I think, but I'm not sure. However, since my source material is VHS, it seems that a frame size of 352x240 would be more appropriate. The DVD video specs call for 720x480, 8000Kbps data rate for 1 hour of video at DVD quality. My capture device is a Sony DVMC-DA2 digitalanalog media converter that is connected via FireWire. I've been using Ulead VideoStudio v5/v6 to capture the video as Type 1 DV in. I'm archiving a bunch of home videos in digital format.