I'm back! And I've got a DVD recorder!
It is a Sanyo DVR-S300. It records to DVD+Rs and DVD+RWs only. With DVD+Rs, you can't see what's on the disc in Windows until it's been finalised. You can use IsoBuster's raw reading powers to copy the .vob files you've made so far to your HD. With DVD+RW, finalising doesn't seem to be necessary or possible; you can view the contents of the disc without IsoBuster.
I went with a DVD recorder because it seemed like most HD recorders encrypt their contents, so you can't simply ethernet or USB the video across. Google shows me that a lot of people suggest plugging the HD recorder into a DVD recorder to get the video off, which sounds ridiculous. An alternative is to build my own PVR server. Not happening. At least, not for less than £100.
It has a Scart input that seems to accept everything and a Scart output that... does stuff. It has RF in and out and some component output.
I've tried it with nearly everything I've got in every possible way. Here are the results.
Long story short: Dreamcast, works with no sound. PS2, Xbox, Gamecube and 3DO work with sound. Everything else has vertical rolling.
Code:
Year Console Output Sound Rolling Good Enough Notes
1982 C64 Composite Internal
1982 C64 RF Internal y y n
1986 NES RF Internal
1987 A500 Composite A520 Modulator
1987 A500 Composite Amitek Modulator
1987 A500 RF A520 Modulator
1987 A500 RF Amitek Modulator
1987 Master System RF Internal
1987 ZX Spectrum +2A RF Internal y y n
1990 Mega Drive RF Internal
1992 A1200 Composite A520 Modulator
1992 A1200 Composite Amitek Modulator
1992 A1200 RF A520 Modulator
1992 A1200 RF Amitek Modulator
1992 A1200 RF Internal
1992 SNES Composite Multi-Out Gamecube y y n
1992 SNES RF Internal y y n
1992 SNES RF Multi-Out Gamester n n n
1993 3DO Composite y n y
1993 3DO RF Internal
1993 3DO S-Video
1993 CD32 Composite Internal y y n
1993 CD32 RF Internal y y n
1993 CD32 S-Video Internal y y n
1994 Jaguar RF Internal
1995 PSX Composite PlayStation y y n
1995 PSX RGB Scart PlayStation y y n
1997 N64 Composite Multi-Out Gamecube y y n
1997 N64 RF Multi-Out Gamester y y n
1997 N64 RF N64 Block y y n
1999 Dreamcast RF Dreamcast n n y 50hz only
2000 PS2 Composite PlayStation y n y
2000 PS2 RGB Scart PlayStation y n y
2000 PS2 PSX Composite PlayStation y y n
2000 PS2 PSX RGB Scart PlayStation y y n
2000 PSone Composite PlayStation y y n
2000 PSone RGB Scart PlayStation y y n
2002 Gamecube Composite Multi-Out Gamecube y n y 50hz only
2002 Gamecube RF Multi-Out Gamester
2002 Gamecube RF N64 Block
2002 Xbox Composite Xbox y n y 50hz only? Check settings!
2005 Xbox 360 Composite Xbox 360
Passing through a VCR (or at least my VCR) hoping for a RF->Scart miracle doesn't have any effect anywhere.
It likes VCRs playing tapes, but it doesn't like the VCR's setup menu. I haven't tried taping games and then capturing the tapes. I'm not that badly in need of 8/16-bit screenshots.
The thing likes to merge and blend adjacent frames on the output movies, which is frustrating for trying to get clean game captures. Only 1/8 of my Dreamcast captures are clear. 1/4 of my PS2 ones, but 3/5 of my Xbox ones. <-- This was wrong. This was my playback software not being set up right.
Crazy Taxi: Still pictures are clear, but the edges shimmer.Ingame is unusable.Pretend the motion blur is an added feature.Tech Romancer."HUH?"Tech Romancer's ugly anyway.Gotta keep going back and forward through frames to find a solid one. (HATE that frame-backwards isn't straightforward in media players.)
The CD32 works! Oh dear.
False alarm. Looks like no Dangerous Streets for me.'3DO experience'.Picture, compressed for 3DO. Uncompressed, mashed up for output, captured, recompressed for DVD video.3DO = lolTwilight PrincessTwiiiilliiiiigghhhhttt Prriiinnnnceeeess.There we goMario World SuperSuipoeWr oMralrdSuper Mario BlurredAtlas games!Fuzzy looking interface?The PS games were frustrating. The games rolled, but the boot sequence didn't. Tried 'em on the original PS, the PSone and the PS2. I suppose the PS3's emulated PS1 might work, but that's just getting silly. NTSC PS games came out in the bizarre rainbow like that Bubsy 3D pic.
Recording using the DVD is still less noisy and easier than the alternatives:
a) play the game while sitting in front of DScaler, manually pressing the screenshot key when something interesting happens and hoping I caught whatever it was I wanted. This gives me the benefit of DScaler's noise reduction and deinterlacing heuristic stuff to get clear progressive-like pictures. I miss frames, and it's not easy playing directly off DScaler's delayed output. A split and amplified signal is needed if I want to play the game on a TV while DScalering and I suppose I could make a screenshot pedal or something. (Or put the keyboard on the floor. Or get a copilot.)
b) play the game while using AMCAP to record the direct output of the console. Recording the entire sequence allows me to pick the exact frame I want. I have to deinterlace the pictures manually (halving the vertical resolution) or engineer situations where there's little motion, pretending it was a progressive picture all along. Needs loads of hard drive space and with my hardware the results aren't very good. I end up having to play in 15 minute bursts of recording, taking frames, and deleting. Luckily, that's about as long as a 3DO game needs to disappoint.
With these methods, I have my crappy noisy internal Hauppage Bt878 and my crappy EasyCAP. The results are a bit crap and involve me dragging the computer across the room to meet the consoles.
Red Faction with AMCAPRed Faction with DScalerRed Faction with Sanyo DVR-S300See full results of DVD capture here!
http://www.mrdictionary.net/stuff/2011/cap_dvd/It works! Ish! It'll do for what I'm using it for. Oddly enough, I bought it to capture 3DO, Xbox, Gamecube and PS2 games... and that's ALL it does. I suppose that's what you get when you buy the first cheapest thng you see. I expect that even if I did buy a moderately more expensive one it would probably have a lot of the same guts (and same problems) unless I went up a tier to ridiculously expensive things.
What I would like is a DVD recorder with the permissiveness of an old CRT telly which records unprocessed video. (Is there a magic box I can use that'll goodify a composite signal so that my DVD recorder'll take it? A camcorder's a bit expensive
... maybe I could put some phono sockets on a breadboard and just throw things on it to make an ad-hoc filter until the signal is fine.) What I would like even more is if interlace never existed. Whoever invented interlace and whoever made this DVD recorder so you can't fiddle with its decoding parameters have a lot to answer for.