If you have Windows XP, I highly recommend Adobe Premier Elements 3, if you can still find it. A little bit of a learning curve, but it's a very powerful program with tons of editing features. You can burn your VHS captures to DVD in high quality.
There's a lot of videos here on Youtube that explains how to do it right. Check them out.
Don't use any system that directly transfers to MP4. You will lose quality right off the bat. If you want the best picture, use a system that captures to MPEG2, AVI, or DV quality (there are lots of them on the market, a few are free). Here's a free one - Golden Videos
After you capture and render in the better format, you can compress it down to MP4 for Youtube with Any Video Converter. That program is free also (find both on Google).
you need a good quality vcr, and firewire capture device built in time base corrector such as vmc-1 ounce you have those any free software can do it such as vertualdab or capdvhs.
If you have Windows XP, I highly recommend Adobe Premier Elements 3, if you can still find it. A little bit of a learning curve, but it's a very powerful program with tons of editing features. You can burn your VHS captures to DVD in high quality.
There's a lot of videos here on Youtube that explains how to do it right. Check them out.
UncleDonAndMikey 10 months ago
Don't use any system that directly transfers to MP4. You will lose quality right off the bat. If you want the best picture, use a system that captures to MPEG2, AVI, or DV quality (there are lots of them on the market, a few are free). Here's a free one - Golden Videos
After you capture and render in the better format, you can compress it down to MP4 for Youtube with Any Video Converter. That program is free also (find both on Google).
UncleDonAndMikey 10 months ago
you need a good quality vcr, and firewire capture device built in time base corrector such as vmc-1 ounce you have those any free software can do it such as vertualdab or capdvhs.
latreche34 10 months ago