A note to all who will listen. :-)
I use AVISynth scripts daily to help me clean up my source footage (primarily VHS and TV Caps) before I do any editing/encoding. This is typically done with TMPGEnc for MPEG-1 and VirtualDub for DivX whereas my DV projects are all done in VV3. There have been occasions where I'd like to use my analogue footage in VV3 but the following issues would have to be dealt with before I make any serious attempts at it.
1) VV3 lacks good pre-processing filters which forces the usage of other utilities such as AVISynth and/or VirtualDub filters. These filters are most often essential when dealing with analogue captures.
2) The use of external tools is complicated further since VV3 it seems, only supports "real" AVI's and won't even attempt to open .avs files.
3) To work around this issue, one can re-render the AVISynth generated AVI in VirtualDub, re-encoding it with Huffyuv to a new file before importing it in VV3. This requires twice the amount of disk space which can amount to tens of GB when dealing with analogue footage. This also eats up a great deal of time.
4) The above Huffyuv source must also be converted to RGB during the encode or else VV3 has issues displaying the file. (Most likely Huffyuv's issue)
If VV3 had some good preprocessing filters, or could open AVISynth files directly I would use VV3 to edit and encode analogue footage as well as DV. I've also heard the MainConcept MPEG-2 codec is very good, only wish I had better options beyond DV.
I use AVISynth scripts daily to help me clean up my source footage (primarily VHS and TV Caps) before I do any editing/encoding. This is typically done with TMPGEnc for MPEG-1 and VirtualDub for DivX whereas my DV projects are all done in VV3. There have been occasions where I'd like to use my analogue footage in VV3 but the following issues would have to be dealt with before I make any serious attempts at it.
1) VV3 lacks good pre-processing filters which forces the usage of other utilities such as AVISynth and/or VirtualDub filters. These filters are most often essential when dealing with analogue captures.
2) The use of external tools is complicated further since VV3 it seems, only supports "real" AVI's and won't even attempt to open .avs files.
3) To work around this issue, one can re-render the AVISynth generated AVI in VirtualDub, re-encoding it with Huffyuv to a new file before importing it in VV3. This requires twice the amount of disk space which can amount to tens of GB when dealing with analogue footage. This also eats up a great deal of time.
4) The above Huffyuv source must also be converted to RGB during the encode or else VV3 has issues displaying the file. (Most likely Huffyuv's issue)
If VV3 had some good preprocessing filters, or could open AVISynth files directly I would use VV3 to edit and encode analogue footage as well as DV. I've also heard the MainConcept MPEG-2 codec is very good, only wish I had better options beyond DV.