To play interlaced video on a progressive display the video must be deinterlaced or else you'll see jagged lines anywhere there's motion, like this. Analog CRT TVs play back interlaced video, but all modern LCD/LED displays only display progressive video. This video is captured and played back at 59.94 fields per second, or 29.97 frames per second for NTSC video. ![]() ![]() Interlacing means each frame of video is split into 2 parts, each called a field. I personally use a mix of the 3 depending on what I'm capturing.įor a capture device I use a Hauppauge USB-Live 2 on Windows 10 64-bit, so these instructions will be based on that. I have 3 methods of capturing and encoding. A lot of what I've read describes ways to do this for old TVs, DVDs, or old computers which just isn't going to cut it in 2018. ![]() I've spent about 3 years now trying various methods to get the best captures of old analog video such as VHS and Video8/Hi8 tapes. ![]() This guide is still a work in progress, some things might not be complete. How to capture, deinterlace, and encode analog video Notice
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