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Posted by blackburst on 09/26/22 11:28
No, this has happened several time swith various tapes - NEW tapes. I
keep a tape in the home miniDV to record the family. When it's filled,
I dub to DVD, but I have audio mismatch about 70% of the time.
OCCASIONALLY, there is a break in "control track", if my wife rewound a
tape to look at it and re-cued it, and that is one of the possible
causes. The DVD recorder "burps" when it sees this.
AnthonyR wrote:
> <blackburst@aol.com> wrote in message
> news:1128433567.515883.254670@g14g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
> >
> > AnthonyR wrote:
> >> <blackburst@aol.com> wrote in message
> >> news:1128373332.795991.297420@g49g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
> >> >
> >> > AnthonyR wrote:
> >> >> Can you tell me which model dvd standalone you are using?
> >> >> Perhaps it's a problem with that hardware or firmware?
> >> >
> >> > It has happened on several:
> >> > Emerson EWR10D4
> >> > Go Video VR3930
> >> > LiteOn LVW-5005
> >> > Sony DVD recorder/VCR combo, number unrecalled
> >> >
> >> I don't believe any of those models have a built in tbc.
> >>
> >> >
> >> >> You can try a google and see if you're not alone using that brand or
> >> >> model
> >> >> recorder.
> >> >> Also an inline time base corrector between the two might help, as
> >> >> years
> >> >> ago
> >> >> that's what
> >> >> I had to do to get good dvd's out of my early philips standalone dvd
> >> >> recorder.
> >> >> I had worse than out of sync audio problems, I use to get audio that
> >> >> would
> >> >> drift and then quickly try and catch up
> >> >> crealting a blirp type audio glitch. The TBC eliminated it but I've
> >> >> since
> >> >> sold that unit and seen newer dvd recorders
> >> >> selling with built in TBC now as almost standard feature on the good
> >> >> ones.
> >> >> AnthonyR.
> >> >
> >> > Wouldn't a TBC slow down the signal a bit? I hate what some TBCs do to
> >> > the signal, and it prevents using firewire. I have a For.A FA-310, and
> >> > it really craps things up. I wish they made TBCs without proc amps.
> >> > (OTOH, it's a great way to defeat some copy protection schemes!)
> >> >
> >> Well the tbc I had use was a datavideo tbc-1000 I don't believe it has
> >> any
> >> proc-amp features.
> >> And I don't know about slowing down the signal, it accepts audio in as
> >> well,
> >> so it might adj for that?
> >> But it had solved my audio problems when I was doing direct to dvd
> >> recording. Of course my audio problems
> >> were on analog tape, but I have had some audio problems from a defective
> >> sony camcorder so I think
> >> possibly it might be your camera itself, try a different one and a fresh
> >> tape and capture to see.
> >>
> >>
> >> Perhaps the problem is in your camera? Have you tried another model?
> >> And a different source tape? That might help identify your problem.
> >> Good Luck,
> >> AnthonyR.
> >
> > It happened with both my Panasonic PVGS15's from work (3 of them) and
> > my home Panasonic 3-chip DV.
> >
> > But I just bought 2 Sony DSR45 DV/DVCAM decks for my studio. I'll let
> > you know if it happens with them!
> >
>
> OK, but were you playing the same footage (same dv tape) with all 3 cameras?
> cause what happenned to me, was a bad camcorder recorded bad audio on dv
> tape, which carried over
> to any camcorder i played that tape on.
> So did you try capturing new material on new tape using another camera and
> testing audiio drift on recorder?
> Or are you just substituting equiptment using this same dv tape (which might
> have the problem recorded on it).
> Just an idea!
>
> Good luck,
> AnthonyR.
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