Canopus Advc 110 Macbook Pro
You won't use FCPX for that. QuickTime player is best for recording from the VHS tape.
Feb 11, 2009 Canopus ADVC-110 Analog to DV Converter - PC/MAC - Input/Out. Final Cut Pro®, Adobe® Premiere® Pro, Vegas®, iLife®, Ulead MediaStudio® Pro, and Windows® Movie Maker. At the heart of.
Not sure FCPX will recognize an old can-o-pus (very old joke) rig. Itunes. Yeah, getting it out to the tape is the trick, not sure what on a modern Mac will recognize the rig. FCPX might, Quicktime player might. That's a lot of work for an effect.
And will people even recognize it?MANY audio and visual effects are more recognizable with exaggerated and slightly non-organic methods than a literal effect. Because people don't respond to things that away.
The general 'memory' of what VHS looks like isn't literal, few memories are. So I'm not sure the effort will be worth it. Try it, share the results with us, let us see what you come up with.
Thanks?What odd responses! One says FCPX might not recognise my ADVC. And that I should use QT. When I literally posted a description of my.actual working rig which includes an ADVC.and I clearly said that it does work. Straaaaannnnggeee but ookkkaaayyyy. Not to mention being advised that I should fake it rather than actually running to VHS.That's not what I asked about, but oookkkkaaaayyyy.So maybe. Can we talk about my question now?The more I think about it though, it really is not a huge ask for me to just burn a DVD and record that.
Perhaps I'm just being lazy. So yeah, will try that and will post the results.Peace!
You would use FCPX AV Output feature to send your timeline playback through HDMI. A Thunderbolt to Fire Wire adapter will work just fine. FCPX can capture video from the Canopus ADVC 110 but as far as I know it will not playback the video to a VTR.
I could be wrong but I don't see the option to use the ADVC 110 as an A/V output.If you have an old or new version of Premiere Pro that will playback to a VTR using the ADVC 110. You could use the 30 day free trial without buying it.Having said that the Intensity Shuttle will work just fine with FCPX if you are playing back standard definition video to a VHS deck. FCPX does not work that great with the Intensity Shuttle for HD.If you are wondering why I am not suggesting you use the Intensity Shuttle to capture VHS it is because the Intensity Shuttle needs a TBC in order to capture VHS tapes. Your VCR may have a built in TBC.
For some strange and incomprehensible reason the Intensity and all Black Magic products to my knowledge are EXTREMELY rigid in their frame rates. If a fly sneezes 3 rooms down the hall, the Black Magic device will lose sync. Have something that runs at 59.95Hz instead of 59.94? 'SCREW YOU' says Blackmagic. They do not build those things well at all, as plenty of other devices can roll with the changes just fine. They should work fine for outputting however, and that is a good idea.A VCR's built-in TBC will not be good enough for a Black Magic device. Not by a long shot.
For some strange and incomprehensible reason the Intensity and all Black Magic products to my knowledge are EXTREMELY rigid in their frame rates. If a fly sneezes 3 rooms down the hall, the Black Magic device will lose sync. Have something that runs at 59.95Hz instead of 59.94? 'SCREW YOU' says Blackmagic. They do not build those things well at all, as plenty of other devices can roll with the changes just fine.
Canopus Advc 110 Macbook Pro Manual
They should work fine for outputting however, and that is a good idea.A VCR's built-in TBC will not be good enough for a Black Magic device. Not by a long shot.I agree. The BMD products can very picky but they can record VHS tapes if they have a good clean broadcast compliant signal. Having said that the Intensity Shuttle works with FCPX for playback of SD but the HD playback does not play that great when compare to Premiere Pro.The only reason I was able to capture Hi-8 tapes from my Sony camcorder is because the Sony camcorder has a built in TBC. If I disable the built in TBC the Shuttle will start to flicker. A lot of people have had success with the built in TBC of their VCR.
Hi all,I have a canopus ADVC110 i'd like to repurpose as part of a 'homemade' DVR. My thought is this - connect the ADVC110 to the source video (i.e. Roku or smart tv) and out to my macbook pro.
I'm trying to figure out the best configuration for this and would appreciate your help.A few items to note: the mac book only has USB and thunderbolt ports and I'm going to be saving to an external HD, possibly via wifi, though that may be a bit ambitious so it can also be directly connected.What do you recommend as the video capture connections from the souce to the ADVC110 and to the computer (i.e. DV in or out, firewire 400-800-thunderbolt or USB input on computer). And what video capture software (think free) should i use (i.e. Quicktime, VLC, other)?What other considerations have I forgotten to think of?Thanks in advance for the suggestions.
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