
#VHS TO DIGITAL FILE CONVERTER FOR WINDOWS OS FOR MAC OS X#
I've seen many hardware devices become unsupported from operating system upgrades, especially Windows 10. UCEC VHS to Digital Converter, All in One Video Capture USB 2.0 VHS VCR TV to DVD Converter for Mac OS X PC Windows 7 8 10, New Upgrade Edition 3.9 out of 5 stars 262 £22.99 £ 22. Many of the analog to USB converters lock you into a certain codec (MPEG-2 for the older ones), and with the ever-unnecessary upgrades on Mac OS X and Windows, you might want to avoid those. They are available both secondhand and new, and if you shop around, they are not expensive, $150 - $200 range, seen some priced lower. Some editors even allow you control on which video codecs to use for storage/compression. What's great is that you can import your clips almost directly into your favorite video editor. I suggest doing some Internet research on analog to Firewire converter boxes, which is platform-indepedent - most Macs support it, and Windows from Vista and newer should support it. > I`ll look into all the suggestions,Thanks so > Just finding the time to sit,play and record while > was at Track speed or slower.There are some Short > averaged 15-20 minutes depending on If the train Convert VHS home movies to digital format - Connect your VCR, camcorder, or any other video source to your PC and capture your audio/video. Import recorded videos onto your Windows computer or Mac for editing, and make your own compilation. > viewing,Our Pace runs up Cajon Boulevard usually Burn edited video files on to DVD, VCD, SVCD. > them to make them uploadable to You Tube type of > to,not just one continuous DVD.I want to section > conversion,as I can break the files as I want There's quite a bit of information if you Google "vhs to dvd" or "vhs to dvd yourtown" If you have 3 or 4 tapes, or more, it would probably be cost effective to buy an interface to connect your tape player to a computer and purchase the required software. I know they used to let you do the work yourself years ago but it looks like they do it all now. I looked at the website for a local company, "Video Kitchen." It looks like they charge $24 to convert one tape to a DVD. If you're looking at doing a bunch of tape it might be better to find a software/hardware package to do it. If you only have a few tapes it might be the best way to go. Some of them will do it for you and others will let you use their equipment and do it yourself. I know of one locally and I would guess that any decent size city will have a shop that can do it. They will probably copy it to a DVD but once it's digital you can probably copy to any storage format. There are some companies around that will do it for you.
