Sorry to start a new post on this but the old thread was getting a bit too long and muddled.
Here's what I've found.
Take DVCAM tape from camera and attempt to capture from DSR-11 using VidCap. Use Capture Tape. Deck reports audio as 48K, captured file is shown as 16/32K in both Vegas and SF7.
Repeat above BUT in Vidcap click Play and when program rolling click Capture Video. Deck again reports audio as 48K, resulting AVI file is now 16/48K!
Conclusion: Without a doubt there's a bug in Vidcap and it's been there since V4.0 and continues in V6.0b. The issue seems to relate to capture starting on blank tape, perhaps VidCap is 'hunting' for a stream and somehow latches on at the wrong sample rate.
This explains why not many people have noted the problem, it certainly wouldn't appear during batch capture, it will not happen if you manually start capturing after program starts. It will happen with Capture Tape. This is probably not the only bug in VidCap related to Capture Tape, others have noted that the command sequence sent to the deck is at odds with industry standards.
Bob.
Here's what I've found.
Take DVCAM tape from camera and attempt to capture from DSR-11 using VidCap. Use Capture Tape. Deck reports audio as 48K, captured file is shown as 16/32K in both Vegas and SF7.
Repeat above BUT in Vidcap click Play and when program rolling click Capture Video. Deck again reports audio as 48K, resulting AVI file is now 16/48K!
Conclusion: Without a doubt there's a bug in Vidcap and it's been there since V4.0 and continues in V6.0b. The issue seems to relate to capture starting on blank tape, perhaps VidCap is 'hunting' for a stream and somehow latches on at the wrong sample rate.
This explains why not many people have noted the problem, it certainly wouldn't appear during batch capture, it will not happen if you manually start capturing after program starts. It will happen with Capture Tape. This is probably not the only bug in VidCap related to Capture Tape, others have noted that the command sequence sent to the deck is at odds with industry standards.
Bob.