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View Full Version : ADVC-110 - Horizontal dark lines on DV Capture


El Enmascarado
14th December 2006, 19:36
I wonder if this is because computers don't play interlaced video too well? However when I export this to the Canopus the horizontal lines aren't visible I can just compare quality which is a little lower then the original tape with the colors being a little less resoluted and everything appearing a little more blury not as sharp... I would say is a 75% compare exactness; this on the same TV. Both input and output use s-video. Back to my question... What can I do to view this video on the computer with the interlace gone? maybe re-capturing?... maybe deinterlace it? But would I still view the horizontal lines? :confused:

JohnnyMalaria
14th December 2006, 20:27
Some pictures might help to understand what you are talking about.....

jggimi
14th December 2006, 22:08
@El Enmascarado:

I'm moving this to the DV forum, since this is DV related. Please, try to start your threads in the most appropriate forum. DV capture is a digital capture via IEEE-1394 (FireWire). DV is also a codec. Threads on DV capture or the DV codec and its use belong here.

Analog capture is capture of analog video via component (multiple RCA), composite (single RCA), or RF (coax) connection. In Europe, several of these may be combined (SCART). Threads on analog capture belong in our general capture forum.

DVB (standard) or HDTV (high-def) digital video capture may be conducted over a variety of connections, such as FireWire, DVI, or HDMI. Capture of these streams is discussed in our HDTV/DVB forum.
Thank you.

El Enmascarado
14th December 2006, 22:38
I used VLC player to change the reendering mode.
ok here is the pictures:

1)Disable (normal playback)
2)Blend deinterlace mode

3)Another one I like is Mean, it shows less interlace artifact then Blend during fast moves, but since I also see the artifacts during slow moves (even though is very little) I prefer Blend instead.
By the way I couldn't take a pic of Mean... the picture appear very horizontal.

So is there a better way to play it back on my computer?

bb
15th December 2006, 18:46
I wonder if this is because computers don't play interlaced video too well?
It's not the computers - it's the progressive display, which is not very well suited for interlaced video. If you want to avoid the interlace lines, you have to deinterlace somehow; there are multiple methods available, either during playback or in the encoding phase.

bb