![]() ![]() Or I might pony up for an x1600XT vivo (either the passive Gigabyte or a cheaper Powercolor). ![]() I'm especially interested in the quality of current Radeon (Avivo-branded) cards, because a Radeon x1300 AIW (with Theater 650) for 80€ has been staring at me for a few hours now. I'd like to poll if there's anyone here who has achieved good results capturing an interlaced SD video source (composite or s-video), or even just still frames from such a source. I'm ready to replace it, if there's a significant improvement. ![]() Obviously the hardware I use is kinda old and dinky. On top of that everything's pretty blurry, much more so than the same source plugged into a TV, so I have suspicions that the card prefilters the composite input pretty hard. OTOH when I enable the corresponding filter in VirtualVCR, the program freezes up (reboot required). But I can't use the de-interlace filter in VDub, because VDub filters only function on RGB capture formats while my card's drivers only support "YUV2" and "UYVY". Then when I start actually capturing I have interlacing in the captured stream in full glory. When I let the software reroute the video input back to output ("Overlay" preview in VDub, just "Preview" in VVCR) all seems to be just dandy. #Fly Bt 878 Tv Kart Xp Driver how to#I found out how to capture full-resolution video with both programs, but the interlacing just kills me. It's a Radeon 9200 Vivo, with the Theater 303 companion chip and I use the Catalyst 6.11 drivers on Windows XP. I have video capturing on my PC but it fails to satisfy. The highest quality method to capture SD video at my disposal right now is to point my camera at my TV. ![]()
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