I've done a fair amount of work with analog video capture and editing tools, but I am looking into the possiblity of purchasing a Canopus ADVC 100 to do some DV work. Previously, my workflow went something like this:
1. Capture video to 704 x 480, using AVI-IO
2. Do trimming work in MSP 6.0 (though I now have MS Director's Cut 6.5, it's the same thing, essentially.)
3. Reassemble the pieces of the finished project using the "file append" feature of VirtualDub (which gave me the capability to rip what would be the complete soundtrack for the finished project, and work on it independently.)
4. Then, using the "frameserve" feature of VirtualDub, send the files to TMPGenc for encoding.
My question is, will this procedure still be possible to use for DV files coming from the Canopus ADVC-100? I understand that there are two different "Types" of DV files (1 and 2), and that there are some pre-existing "issues" with both VDub and AVI-IO in working with DV in general (I believe, if I've read correctly, that they only work with Type 2 files). MSP says it supports both types (though it's opening splash page in the video editor project module only has setups for working with Type 1 files...); but I've additionally read something about a proprietary Canopus codec (in the ADVC-100 case, a **hardware** codec, no less) that has me leery about the compatability of the files that the unit generates. If the Canopus files are only useful with the box in the loop, I'm not very keen on the whole idea.
So, can someone verify what form the Canopus generated DV files are in, once they're captured to a PC? Are they merely standard DV-type files, once they're on my machine (no Canopus codec needed to work with them)? Is the DV file type decided by the Canopus box, is it dependent on the capture codec (actually, a "filter", I know) that I use to bring it in? Would using the MainConcept codec help?
For effects, would I still be able to use DynaPel's Motion Perfect software (as I sometimes do for my analog AVI's)? Or do they only support one or the other (if any) of the DV file types?
And will TMPGenc work with DV files at all?
**Whew**
Sorry to ask everything at once, but I thought I'd just get all of this out of the way, so I can try to make a decision one way or the other. Thanks for any guidance that you folks can give!
-Joel Cairo
1. Capture video to 704 x 480, using AVI-IO
2. Do trimming work in MSP 6.0 (though I now have MS Director's Cut 6.5, it's the same thing, essentially.)
3. Reassemble the pieces of the finished project using the "file append" feature of VirtualDub (which gave me the capability to rip what would be the complete soundtrack for the finished project, and work on it independently.)
4. Then, using the "frameserve" feature of VirtualDub, send the files to TMPGenc for encoding.
My question is, will this procedure still be possible to use for DV files coming from the Canopus ADVC-100? I understand that there are two different "Types" of DV files (1 and 2), and that there are some pre-existing "issues" with both VDub and AVI-IO in working with DV in general (I believe, if I've read correctly, that they only work with Type 2 files). MSP says it supports both types (though it's opening splash page in the video editor project module only has setups for working with Type 1 files...); but I've additionally read something about a proprietary Canopus codec (in the ADVC-100 case, a **hardware** codec, no less) that has me leery about the compatability of the files that the unit generates. If the Canopus files are only useful with the box in the loop, I'm not very keen on the whole idea.
So, can someone verify what form the Canopus generated DV files are in, once they're captured to a PC? Are they merely standard DV-type files, once they're on my machine (no Canopus codec needed to work with them)? Is the DV file type decided by the Canopus box, is it dependent on the capture codec (actually, a "filter", I know) that I use to bring it in? Would using the MainConcept codec help?
For effects, would I still be able to use DynaPel's Motion Perfect software (as I sometimes do for my analog AVI's)? Or do they only support one or the other (if any) of the DV file types?
And will TMPGenc work with DV files at all?
**Whew**
Sorry to ask everything at once, but I thought I'd just get all of this out of the way, so I can try to make a decision one way or the other. Thanks for any guidance that you folks can give!
-Joel Cairo
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