I have been on a very long project of archving my collection of Laserdiscs to DVD. Many of my discs are not already on DVD and it is not expected that they ever will since I have been collecting obscure import releases for years.
At first I used a Dazzle DVC II which was fast, but the picture isn't great. I have now honed the process to where I get amazing results.
I capture the S-Video out and analog audio through an analog to DV box (camcorder with pass-throug or Dazzle DV bridge). At the same time I record the SPDIF out of the player to a stereo track in VV3. I do this so that the sound track I work with is uncompressed and not re-digitized by the DV device.
In VV3 I sync the two sound tracks. This turned out to be easy because the DV device and the SPIF in on the sound card (RME Hammerfall) are getting their clock from the same source - the player. Once I have captured both sides and used VV3 to re-assemle the whole moive, I render both a WAV and DV avi file.
I take the rendered avi and pass it through a few filters in Virtual Dub so that video noise from the laser disc is minimized. I then make a new project in VV3, bringin the wav, and the picture from the filtered avi and render to an MPEG-2 DVD file whos average bit rate has been calculated to make a 4 gig file from the project. I have a spread sheet that can predict the total file size given a 15 second render that tells me what the average bit rate should be.
Overall, the DVDs look better than the original Laserdisc!
At first I used a Dazzle DVC II which was fast, but the picture isn't great. I have now honed the process to where I get amazing results.
I capture the S-Video out and analog audio through an analog to DV box (camcorder with pass-throug or Dazzle DV bridge). At the same time I record the SPDIF out of the player to a stereo track in VV3. I do this so that the sound track I work with is uncompressed and not re-digitized by the DV device.
In VV3 I sync the two sound tracks. This turned out to be easy because the DV device and the SPIF in on the sound card (RME Hammerfall) are getting their clock from the same source - the player. Once I have captured both sides and used VV3 to re-assemle the whole moive, I render both a WAV and DV avi file.
I take the rendered avi and pass it through a few filters in Virtual Dub so that video noise from the laser disc is minimized. I then make a new project in VV3, bringin the wav, and the picture from the filtered avi and render to an MPEG-2 DVD file whos average bit rate has been calculated to make a 4 gig file from the project. I have a spread sheet that can predict the total file size given a 15 second render that tells me what the average bit rate should be.
Overall, the DVDs look better than the original Laserdisc!