I just got an HF20/HF200 so how would i be able to record, samething as you said about the HV30? right? nd what are the differences between mine and yours?
if you just got a 600+ dollar camera just to record video games you sir a fucking stupid. If for other reasons thats fine. I'm guessing with these camcorders it only gets 1 quality and that is standard definition
I'm sure you can buddy. Mostly all new canon camera's can. Look up your camera on CNET and look at specs. After that scroll until you find inputs and if it says composite a/v then it does. I don't know everything about every single camera kid. There is a website/search engine called google that I heard works really well for situations like these.
Plug the A/v (yellow, red, white) cords in the video out of your tv, plug the other end into your camera. Go to play mode on your camera. Press the menu button, go to the bottom, click, click on the top one, then go to AV->DV and turn it on. Then you need to go to the main menu again, Click on record something on the very top of the menu, then hit execute, then press play and you are recording.
It is technically HD, just it isn't anything close to the quality of a HD PVR. Although my camera really wasn't focused 100% on doing this type of thing, HD PVRs are though.
does it give you the option to maintain aspect ratio or not? Because if you allow the video to maintain the aspect ratio when you render it, this is what you will get, the stupid black lines. It took me a while to figure it out too.
I just got an HF20/HF200 so how would i be able to record, samething as you said about the HV30? right? nd what are the differences between mine and yours?
PremiumGamingCenter 2 years ago
if you just got a 600+ dollar camera just to record video games you sir a fucking stupid. If for other reasons thats fine. I'm guessing with these camcorders it only gets 1 quality and that is standard definition
VVi8 2 years ago
@VVi8
thats not my question. can you get av to switch to dv? just tell me
PremiumGamingCenter 2 years ago
I'm sure you can buddy. Mostly all new canon camera's can. Look up your camera on CNET and look at specs. After that scroll until you find inputs and if it says composite a/v then it does. I don't know everything about every single camera kid. There is a website/search engine called google that I heard works really well for situations like these.
VVi8 2 years ago
@VVi8
Haha funny last sentence. Thx anywase. Not trying to hate.
PremiumGamingCenter 2 years ago
How did you record this? I have a cannon HV30. Can you please reply to this or message me.
BilzozANinja 2 years ago
Plug the A/v (yellow, red, white) cords in the video out of your tv, plug the other end into your camera. Go to play mode on your camera. Press the menu button, go to the bottom, click, click on the top one, then go to AV->DV and turn it on. Then you need to go to the main menu again, Click on record something on the very top of the menu, then hit execute, then press play and you are recording.
VVi8 2 years ago
Comment removed
BilzozANinja 2 years ago
Comment removed
BilzozANinja 2 years ago
looks goood but not hd
zandrew1293 2 years ago
It is technically HD, just it isn't anything close to the quality of a HD PVR. Although my camera really wasn't focused 100% on doing this type of thing, HD PVRs are though.
VVi8 2 years ago
does it give you the option to maintain aspect ratio or not? Because if you allow the video to maintain the aspect ratio when you render it, this is what you will get, the stupid black lines. It took me a while to figure it out too.
TeamMissingInAction 2 years ago