Sony DCR-DVD505
Moderator: Ken Berry
- Ron P.
- Advisor
- Posts: 12002
- Joined: Tue May 10, 2005 12:45 am
- System_Drive: C
- 32bit or 64bit: 64 Bit
- motherboard: Hewlett-Packard 2AF3 1.0
- processor: 3.40 gigahertz Intel Core i7-4770
- ram: 16GB
- Video Card: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 645
- sound_card: NVIDIA High Definition Audio
- Hard_Drive_Capacity: 4TB
- Monitor/Display Make & Model: 1-HP 27" IPS, 1-Sanyo 21" TV/Monitor
- Corel programs: VS5,8.9,10-X5,PSP9-X8,CDGS-9,X4,Painter
- Location: Kansas, USA
Hi Bubbas, and welcome to the forums..
Yes you can. Your camcorder should record to a DVD disc. There are a couple of ways to get your video into VS10+. I think your camcorder should have a firewire port (iLink IEEE1394). This is the best way to transfer your files. It allows you to edit DV-AVI. Then you could put your DVD into your DVD tray on your computer, and in VS10+ to import the video files, choose Insert DV/DV-R. However these will be some form of MPEG format, possibly MPEG2, which is intended to be viewed, distributed and not edited.
Browse through the forums, or do searches on MPEG2, Out of Sync (OOS), and you will find numerous entries to keep you busy for a few hours...
Ron P.
Yes you can. Your camcorder should record to a DVD disc. There are a couple of ways to get your video into VS10+. I think your camcorder should have a firewire port (iLink IEEE1394). This is the best way to transfer your files. It allows you to edit DV-AVI. Then you could put your DVD into your DVD tray on your computer, and in VS10+ to import the video files, choose Insert DV/DV-R. However these will be some form of MPEG format, possibly MPEG2, which is intended to be viewed, distributed and not edited.
Browse through the forums, or do searches on MPEG2, Out of Sync (OOS), and you will find numerous entries to keep you busy for a few hours...
Ron P.
Ron Petersen, Web Board Administrator
