alongwaltz Wrote:
The way the VCR in the family room is set up, it tapes whatever's on the tv screen right now. Including the volume dial increasing or decreasing and the guide showing up when I click on it.
So I thought I'd be able to pop a dvd into the dvd player and just hit record on the vcr, but all I wound up with was a black, silent screen on the videotape after..
This doesn't make sense. Somewhere you have to switch between the TV (cable? dish? same diff) signal and the DVD signal. If both run thru the VCR, chances are that the TV signal runs thru the RF input (the antenna-type with the threads for screwing something on it) and the DVD runs into the line input. This means you'd have to change the channel on the VCR to the Line Input to record the DVD.
In any event, you should be able to record the DVD straight to the VCR, tho some DVDs (more current full-length types like concerts)
may have copy protection embedded which might mess this up.
Now, dispite what others have said, blowing up a web-sized video to 720x480 won't look as bad on a videotape as it will on your puter monitor although it really depends on how small (pixel-wise) the clip is to start with, but a 320x240 clip will generally look about the same as a vhs dubbed to another. The trouble here tho is a lot of times the audio is over-compressed. If you can live with that it's no big deal, otherwise you might want to consider retracking the audio of said clips. In fact, just making the audio sound better will trick the eyes a bit in favor of better-looking video quality. If you have a Mac, this is easily accomplished with iMovie. I can't speak for Win-based apps.
Final thoughts: I've been making mix-video tapes for 18 years and they became much much easier once I started making them on the puter. It takes longer this way but 1) every segue is as perfect as you want it to be and B) you can stop and start as you please. There are apps out there that will let you rip specific parts off DVDs (say, 1 song), and you can import the rips into an editing app and build your set. Then play the set out to tape, or if you can't do that with your puter burn a DVD (and don't forget chapter markers at the head of each clip!).
Good luck!
