Jonathan Jones |
May 15th, 2006 09:04 PM |
Navigating back and forth through the tape is always going to result in some degree of wear. That's just the nature of friction...and the tapes are designed for this as to normal use, and such wear is rarely detrimental...however, endless navigation will eventually result in more wear, and may perhaps eventually result in periodic drop-outs or other problems with the tape. It partially depends upon how much 'back'n'forth-ing' you need to do.
Why not just import the tape into a dv file on your computer using just some basic NLE? If you are on a PC, Windows Movie Maker should at least get the job done, and if you are on a Mac, iMovie will be a cinch, from which you can export to several differend compressed quicktime movie files and toss the capture to save space if that is a concern. (Standard dv capture will eat up over 12 gigs of space for every hour of dv tape.) One play into the computer and that's it...leaving the tape safe and pristine afterwards, while you can transcribe from the dv file forever and day.
-Jon
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