Well, how should I do to capture 1.33:1 with dscaler5? Right now I can only capture in 720X480 making the image to have wrong ratio. Are there anything I can change so record in 640X480? Or must I change the ratio in virtualdubmod and would this have a bad effect on the image (recording 720x480 for 640x480 matrial and resixe it in VDM)?
Originally posted by: nin Well, how should I do to capture 1.33:1 with dscaler5? Right now I can only capture in 720X480 making the image to have wrong ratio. Are there anything I can change so record in 640X480? Or must I change the ratio in virtualdubmod and would this have a bad effect on the image (recording 720x480 for 640x480 matrial and resixe it in VDM)?
720x480 is 1.33:1 or 16:9 NTSC. I don't know about dscaler5... even microsoft paint can resize the image for you.
Some were not blessed with brains. <blockquote>Originally posted by: BadAssKeith
You are passing up on a great opportunity to makes lots of money, make Lucas lose a lot of his money and make him look bad to the entire world and you could be well known and liked
None of us here like Lucas or Lucasfilm. I have death wishes on Lucas and Macullum. we could all probably get 10s of thousands of dollars!
It depends what your final desired format will be,and what kind of processing you will be doing.
If you're making a DVD, then capture at 720x480, because that's what your final size will be.
If you're making an AVI file for playback on the PC, then you could capture at 640x480, but if you want to do any processing (e.g. noise reduction) then it's usually recommended to capture at 720x480 and resize after processing.
Some were not blessed with brains. <blockquote>Originally posted by: BadAssKeith
You are passing up on a great opportunity to makes lots of money, make Lucas lose a lot of his money and make him look bad to the entire world and you could be well known and liked
None of us here like Lucas or Lucasfilm. I have death wishes on Lucas and Macullum. we could all probably get 10s of thousands of dollars!
No, I was talking about capturing a 1.33:1 image. The only way I can do it is if I record it stretched to 720x480. Than I need to re-size it to 640x480 to get it like it should, right?