Timing converter for capturing?
Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2011 6:22 am
While I was at UFGT7, Seb mentioned that he wanted to record some ST finals. But I told him that he could try however ST and other arcade games don't run NTSC framerates and the v-sync is a bit off so newer capturing methods have trouble interrepting the footage being sent to it. As I've had trouble recording with my USB/PCI/PCIe cards and have had to use a DVD recorder in order to record some of the footage (doesn't work with UMK3 as that sync is even weirder than CPS2 or ZN2 platforms).
He mentoned something about a "timer". I guess its a device that'll convert the v-freq of the sync to something standard like NTSC 29.97/59.94. I had never heard of anything like that before. I did a quick google check and saw some IC chips that I could wire up that might do the trick. But I'm not 100% sure if thats what he was talking about.
Have any of you ever heard of something like this? I'd assume that it might skew of the audio during the capture but I can always change the fps after capturing to something closer to its native fps so that'll eliminate the audio desync problem (should one exist in the first place).
He mentoned something about a "timer". I guess its a device that'll convert the v-freq of the sync to something standard like NTSC 29.97/59.94. I had never heard of anything like that before. I did a quick google check and saw some IC chips that I could wire up that might do the trick. But I'm not 100% sure if thats what he was talking about.
Have any of you ever heard of something like this? I'd assume that it might skew of the audio during the capture but I can always change the fps after capturing to something closer to its native fps so that'll eliminate the audio desync problem (should one exist in the first place).