That was fun! He’ll be up on ebay on Sunday afternoon.
Mirrored from The blog-hub for Peter "Sci" Turpin.
That was fun! He’ll be up on ebay on Sunday afternoon.
Mirrored from The blog-hub for Peter "Sci" Turpin.
So I’ve been trying to find an affordable video editor to avoid the mutlitude of format-incompatibilities with the various freeware I’ve tried so far. A few days ago I installed “VideoPad” which until the 15th of Jan is on 30% discount making it about £45.
Of course that’s £45 I shouldn’t be spending, but.. well some quick and dirty edits seem to show it working fine merging videos of different resolutions and framerates. Okay framerate conversion is rather rough looking, but whatever it’s doing it’s FAR more tollerant than the other programs I tried (remember the one that wouldn’t combine clips because one was 30fps and the other was 30.00003fps? Or had the codec info case-sensitive so it thought they were different formats?).
The built-in capture util sadly wouldn’t let me change the video card input port. But NCH bundle their software to link-out to associated software. I clicked the link within VideoPad for “Golden Videos” a small capture program intended for capturing from tapes. But best of all it actually fucking works with my RealTek soundcard AND captures without dropping frames at full PAL resolution.
I have litterally been in tears of joy, because since I switched to Windows XP I have tried everything I could think of to get full-frame full-rate capture working. The best I’d been able to manage was installing an old copy of WinDVR to capture to mpeg2 and to disable onboard sound, instead throwing in an old (noisey) PCI Soundblaster card. And that had even odds of bluescreening the machine every time you started the program.
More than 6 years trying to fix one issue and a solution just dropped in my lap.
Okay this program’s ripping to Xvid rather than uncompressed, but it looks better than mpeg.
I’ve ripped a few old tapes to the PC now. Some are very good looking, others not so much. The Furry-artist interviews I did at that convention in the USA have suffered quite badly, as the camera did not travel well and started conking out at points due to temp/humidity, as well as being set to LP for a large portion. The audio, with a few FZZZTs asside, is actually very good though. It’s given me the idea to chop the unwatchable portions of video and fill them with sketch-animatics of the artists and other reference images. It could actually work quite well in the end.
Mostly I’m glad I found the impromtu interview with Ashryn. I thought it was the last thing I recorded there and since it wasn’t after the last “proper” interview on the last tape, I assumed I must have done the whole interview without pressing record somehow. But no, just got the order mixed up in my mind and it’s still there.
I should be able to do something good with this, even if it is 6 years later than I’d intended.
Also found video of my grandfather showing how to make his famous apple tarts, and some footage of one of his birthday parties. Is bittersweet to watch.
And ancient footage, even a short bit of the folk I worked for down in Hastings when I first got a video camera (not the huge one I got later), followed by the big Exeter Therians meet back in 2001.
Lot of lost history on these tapes. Just like the lost chat-logs and photos I’ve saved from the old tiny HDs.
So many things that were lost and gone are suddenly found.
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Nothing special, just if you want to peer in on my tinkering and sorting, seen through the new cam. :)
Mirrored from The blog-hub for Peter "Sci" Turpin.
Always knew getting the service manual would be a good move.
Dug out the old JVC GR-S707′s. They’re a pair of SVHS-C semi-professional camcorders I picked up off ebay years back. One worked fine, only needing a new microphone muff. This came with me all the way to the USA to do some filming at a convention, and damn near broke my spine in the process.
The other was acquired a couple of years after that and turned out to be actually broken, as opposed to a little temperamental in high humidity. I set it aside as a parts camera, or something to try and fix later. It now may be “later”.
I still haven’t tested the capture rig, but will be in the next few days. I was actually looking for a lens this evening when I dug out the spares/repair cam. I had a couple of ideas though, and tried them out quickly.
The viewfinder displays a heavily distorted and rolling image when filming or on playback. The spares kit included all the proprietary cables, so I tried hooking it up to the capture card. Same result there, only in colour. Very heavy blue distortion.
Noticed however the viewfinder and AV output share the same connector type. May mean I can fit one or the other with a colour viewfinder from a different camera at some point. I think I have an even more elderly camcorder with a colour tube.
Found a tape to test in camera. Noticeably worse playback than on dedicated playback unit.
So here’s the interesting bit: PLAYBACK on the damaged camera works fine. However recording is badly affected.
A/V board eliminated. Viewfinder eliminated. Playback eliminated.
Now, from the diagrams it APPEARS that the viewfinder connects to the CPU board. Probably since on-screen info can be included on the video and the viewfinder separately, so that’s done there.
Pain the bum is a lot of these block diagrams had sections in green, and they were scanned in black and white for the PDF, so large portions are near-illegible grey smears.
Still, that both outputs from the CPU board are effected, including the portions that should be different for each output, says it’s either the CPU board itself, or the CPU board’s trying to fit the on-screen data to corrupted video. And since I can’t see how the CPU could corrupt the video feed as well, we move further down the line.
The overall wiring block diagram has the CPU connect to the THD (no explanation of abbreviations included for PCBs). Schematic diagrams show this to be motor and sensor control for the optics themselves as well as pass-through for video and character data, to the Video board.
The video board seems to have tonnes of lovely little trim-pots, any of which might have gotten out of whack. Two are named “Sync level” and “1H Delayed sig level”, both of which sound to me like they could be the cause of this odd issue. It does seem to be some sort of timing issue, afterall (and maybe more, if the blue tint isn’t an associated effect).
That said, the grip on the camera has always been.. sticky. As in coated with something. It could be something leaked down inside the camera through the zoom controls and onto the PCBs under it, altering component values.
In any case, opening it up and giving it a clean-out would seem in it’s best interests.
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Ah, forgot I also bought an original non-PDF copy of the service manual. PCB diagrams are still in greyscale, but in much more detail. Schematics are detailed in colour. Indications of binder-holes though suggest either isn’t (wholly) original itself, or JVC actually sent out service manuals that were photocopied from an original.
Mind you, nice that it even goes into detailing the functions of the pins of each IC used, including part numbers. If I should ever need to make a new CPU board for one of these, it’s nice to know it’s only cost me $300 in processor chips alone.
[20/06/2010: Amalgamating old posts from "Dreamwidth Creative Blog" into sci-fi-fox.com to re-purpose DW blog account.]
Mirrored from The blog-hub for Peter "Sci" Turpin.
I have not been coping well today.
Footpads haven’t bonded correctly. Gluing method hasn’t worked very well. I guess the rubber chemistry changes while setting. Unset won’t bond to set.
Going to have to try slashing the velcro to get rubber to bond into it better.
Still, one set come out acceptable.
More casting tomorrow. May catch up yet.
Also roughed out the folding mechanism for the Bonsai Repstrap..
A portable 3D printer is certainly feasible.
[20/06/2010: Amalgamating old posts from "Dreamwidth Creative Blog" into sci-fi-fox.com to re-purpose DW blog account.]
Mirrored from The blog-hub for Peter "Sci" Turpin.
Paw-pads:
Well, the Shore 75 rubber is now here, the 60 has been returned. I’ve not yet caught up with the orders though. There’s a rare collective motivation going on in the house right now that’s saying “Yes, let’s actually clear stuff out!”
Workshop:
Over the past few days I’ve filled one of the wheelie-bins all by myself just with stuff from the workshop. And there’s more yet to come!
It’s been a really harsh thing to do though. I’m a packrat, and I do tend to use the things I pick up sooner or later. But it’s best not to dwell on it all. The space is far more important atm.
Reprap:
Ordered some more Bonsai prototyping bits, but the aluminium tube was out of stock in the end, so I’m going to have to go with stainless instead.
You see, the first simplification I’m making to the Mendel layout is to use the frame as the runners by wrapping the studding with push-fit tube. It should also have the benefit of making assembly and adjustment easier, if I cut the pipes to the correct lengths. Just assemble and tighten.
Art-bike:
Also stripped down the big bicycle frame someone dumped in the alleyway. The front fork stem is the same diameter as the stem on the unicycle I picked up last year. Will have to do some careful grinding and welding, but fitting the unicycle up as the front wheel should be fine. And the frames pedal cranks look like they’ll swap with the unicycle ones, so I can hopefully get the mechanism I was after working alright.
It should make it all into a nice half-horse and buggy. Eventually.
Blacksmithing:
I’ve got a rough forge assembled, but I still need to line it with refractory. Have fire cement and perlite, but think I need to pick up some dry sand too. Well, and some charcoal.
Video:
Got some footage from the digital camera that needs editing. Also haven’t yet tested the capture machine I assembled last week. It’s on my to-do list.
T-shirts:
Seeing who’s interested in what types and sizes. Think I can afford to get one atm. No reply from supplier atm. Will call them in the morning and make an order for the large blue UKFur shirts.
Also converted the carrying case that came with the shirts into something more like a portable shop by chopping down an Ikea hanging rail and mounting fixings inside the case. Now I can store the rail inside the case and use the case as the base of it.
Art:
Yeah, I’m behind on this. But I am catching up.
[20/06/2010: Amalgamating old posts from "Dreamwidth Creative Blog" into sci-fi-fox.com to re-purpose DW blog account.]
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Old 1.7Ghz machine is out of storage. Running diagnostics to see if I can isolate where the hardware problem is (I suspect the 80Gb boot disk), before installing Win2000 and a capture card on it. And nothing else.
Will also put the old 5.25″ floppy drive in it and see if any old disks still work.
Yesterdays castings are de-moulded. Unfortunately two sets show small areas of unmixed pigment. Will have to double-stage mix it from here on. Still, getting closer to high-resolution shots of all sets, as well as having display sets.
Called TOMPS, still no word yet. Sounds like the boss is out of the office a lot these past few days. Still, have someone wanting a footpad order, and won’t be able to honour it until I have the shore-80. It’s been a week since I emailed them about this.
Up to 9 Mendel brackets cast. Should have the rest needed in an hour or so. I’ll lock up again for a bit after that, get some artwork done, before casting some more pads in the evening.
Had a reply back from the connector company, wanting to know the pitch of the connector image I sent them. I thought I’d included that in my description. Yep. Ugh..
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DorkBot London was very entertaining last night. My main point of confusion had always been that I’d never found where they talked online. Simple answer; they don’t. You go along, meet people and then communicate one-to-one. This seems surprisingly traditional for such a techno-arty field.
I suppose things like the 2600 meets are the same though. It just feels a little upside-down to me though, having mostly gone to groups or forums which then sparked real-world meetings.
EDIT: 5.25″ drive seems to be working intermittently. Will have to strip it down and clean it.
[20/06/2010: Amalgamating old posts from "Dreamwidth Creative Blog" into sci-fi-fox.com to re-purpose DW blog account.]
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Just a little something recorded with the new digital camera. The one that you get the video off via USB.
[20/06/2010: Amalgamating old posts from "Dreamwidth Creative Blog" into sci-fi-fox.com to re-purpose DW blog account.]
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*sigh*
Adobe Premiere only captures from DV sources. My SAA7130 capture card isn’t recognised by it.
AvidFreeDV is the same.
VirtualDub disconnects from the capture device when I try and change the capture resolution. And when I reconnect it resets to 320*240 anyway. Capture output files contain no video.
Attempting to capture with any compression crashes the capture system.
WinDVR doesn’t capture the audio due to the RealTek onboard video card. I can reinstall a separate soundcard, but few of them work on XP and none have the extra I/Os I need.
WinDVD Creator crashes when trying to connect.
When it doesn’t crash instantly, Windows Movie Maker won’t capture in anything but WMV.
So far my best option looks to be to capture in WinDVR using mpeg2 compression and capture and sync the audio manually afterwards.
And attempting to simply connect to the card in MPC bluescreens the machine.
REALLY getting pissed off with this. I bought cameras and playback units so I could actually do something with recorded video. It’s been nearly 4 fucking years and upgrading to XP has stopped me from doing any of it! VirtualDub worked PERFECTLY on Windows 2000. Not a single frame dropped at full PAL resolution, directly from my SVHS playback unit.
I can’t even connect to the fucking video source on XP without something crashing or having to physically replace hardware, let alone getting to the point of TRYING to record it!
Am I seriously going to have to BUILD a Windows 2000 machine just for recording video? Not even for editing it; just recording it??
I’d happily farm the capture out to someone else at this stage except the files produced would by several gigabytes a piece, and getting them onto this machine to edit them would be an equal nightmare!
[20/06/2010: Amalgamating old posts from "Dreamwidth Creative Blog" into sci-fi-fox.com to re-purpose DW blog account.]
Mirrored from The blog-hub for Peter "Sci" Turpin.