Richardson Leao Posted December 13, 2006 Share Posted December 13, 2006 Hi all, I finally have done 16mm telecine my first time. Due to my ignorance, i asked the video house to record DVcam format in my miniDV tapes as I was sure that it would play in a normal minidv camera (the ones grandmothers have). To my deception, they don't. So, just to do a simple edition for previewing it, what should I do that would make sense economically? find somewhere to copy it to other miniDV with miniDV format or a hard drive? Rent a deck? Many thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Member Andy Sparaco SOC Posted December 13, 2006 Premium Member Share Posted December 13, 2006 [ find somewhere to copy it to other miniDV with miniDV format or a hard drive? Rent a deck? Many thanks You are far better off having a professional Post house capture your DV tape to the file format you want to work with. In fact you should have had the Xfer to hard drive. The days of video tape are numbered. The cost of a firewire drive will be the same or less then the cost of a deck rental. Have the post house capture in less then 8 gig chunks so you can back up on DVD-ram Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Steve Zimmerman Posted December 13, 2006 Share Posted December 13, 2006 (edited) Hi all, I finally have done 16mm telecine my first time. Due to my ignorance, i asked the video house to record DVcam format in my miniDV tapes as I was sure that it would play in a normal minidv camera (the ones grandmothers have). I had something similar happen when I had a friend at a local TV station make a DV tape copy of my Student film, thinking I could then transfer to my home computer with any cheapo $250 DV camera. Turns out it was recorded in DVC-Pro50, and it would only play at half speed and no sound. I figured out I could play the tape with higher end prosumer cameras like a Panasonic DVX100a. So maybe you could try to borrow a camera from a filmmaking friend? Edited December 13, 2006 by Steve Zimmerman Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Steve Zimmerman Posted December 13, 2006 Share Posted December 13, 2006 If you go the camcorder route you should find a Sony DVCAM prosumer camera: a PD-150, like they shoot weddings on (or David Lynch features :P ) or similar. I guess DVX100's can play DVCAM, but there are dropouts. Best to stay with the same brand in this case. Maybe this will help. Steve Z. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Member Stephen Williams Posted December 13, 2006 Premium Member Share Posted December 13, 2006 Hi all, I finally have done 16mm telecine my first time. Due to my ignorance, i asked the video house to record DVcam format in my miniDV tapes as I was sure that it would play in a normal minidv camera (the ones grandmothers have). To my deception, they don't. So, just to do a simple edition for previewing it, what should I do that would make sense economically? find somewhere to copy it to other miniDV with miniDV format or a hard drive? Rent a deck? Many thanks Hi, A Sony miniDV camera will almost certanly play the DVcam recorded tape. Stephen Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Michael Collier Posted December 13, 2006 Share Posted December 13, 2006 Addendum to stephens post: a sony Prosumer camera will...their handycams won't playback dvcam. The new HDVs will, the PD-150/170 will (and you can rent those cheap) If its short try and call a TV station or a rental house and try and get a buddy-buddy deal with them, you might be able to do it cheaply if you bring your laptop in to capture it to. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Member Stephen Williams Posted December 13, 2006 Premium Member Share Posted December 13, 2006 Addendum to stephens post: a sony Prosumer camera will...their handycams won't playback dvcam. The new HDVs will, the PD-150/170 will (and you can rent those cheap) If its short try and call a TV station or a rental house and try and get a buddy-buddy deal with them, you might be able to do it cheaply if you bring your laptop in to capture it to. Michael, Sony handycams used to, I have a very cheap 3 year old one that I use just for that. Stephen Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Richardson Leao Posted December 14, 2006 Author Share Posted December 14, 2006 Michael, Sony handycams used to, I have a very cheap 3 year old one that I use just for that. Stephen Hi Stephen, would you have an idea of any older models that could play dvcam? many thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sam Wells Posted December 14, 2006 Share Posted December 14, 2006 I've done it with a Sony PC-1 --- I'm sure there are quite a few others -Sam Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Member Stephen Williams Posted December 14, 2006 Premium Member Share Posted December 14, 2006 Hi Stephen, would you have an idea of any older models that could play dvcam? many thanks Hi, I've used several, the all worked, I am not at home so I can't give you the model no of my current one. Stephen Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Michael Collier Posted December 14, 2006 Share Posted December 14, 2006 Really? I had no idea some of the handycams could do that. My buddy had one (forget the model #) and it didn't work on that one. I know most of their semi-pro camera lines will, all their pro lines will, and just about any sony deck meant to play DV25 will play DVCAM. Very interesting since I will be getting my telecine on DVCAM.....any minute now....still waiting....man I should have never said 'put my film on an lower priority for a better rate' at this point I want to pay weekend and holiday rates just to see my footage! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marcus Frakes Posted December 14, 2006 Share Posted December 14, 2006 I played and transferred a DV-Cam signal on my old Sony TRV 900. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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