
I need help with this as I am trying tofind a solution to capture on one of my two cards without the need for investing in an X-RGB2 to hook up to my VGA-composite convertor. (Already overspent this month

Can anyone help?
I'm not familiar with a JROK. Could you tell me what it is, how cheap, how available? If it helps, I'm using a preconstructed mini-supergun (a MAK to be precise, the ones that pop up on eBay a lot) and it's connected to my regular SCART splitter which feeds SCART to the TV and a composite signal to the capture card.iatneH wrote:Do you have a JROK or similar circuit?
Might help to convert the video into a more commonly recognised format (e.g. NTSC composite or S-video) before feeding it into the capture card. It shouldn't matter that the signal quality is worse since I'm sure you'll be compressing it later on anyway.
Why not record directly to the camcorder in VCR mode (assuming your camcorder has video-in)?PC Engine Fan X! wrote:I just use a mini DV camcorder and record the video footage directly off my RGB monitor and burn it to a DVD-R disc. You'd have to manual adjust the mini DV camcorder so that the picture is at it's sharpest when actually recording directly off RGB monitor...otherwise, the picture won't as sharp. Also, disable auto-focus and switch to manual focus so that the DV camcorder doesn't have to auto-focus during portions of the actual arcade PCB game session when it is all "black or white" screen, otherwise, the picture will be a bit out of focus when the image appears again on-screen on the RGB monitor. I had to learn by trial & error of making my own arcade shmup Super Replay DVDs myself.
I used a Supergun that both outputs in NTSC S-Video and native RGB signals and used a 27" TV monitor as the actual game monitor while I had my mini DV camcorder aimed at my 14" RGB monitor for video recording purposes...all this took place inside a dark room for best picture recording purposes.
Then with the burned DVD-R disc, take that and download it to my PC's hard drive to further compress it using two video compression programs to get it compressed even further to fit on a 256MB Sony Memory Stick Pro Duo card and watch some cool arcade shmup replay videos on my PSP. That is what I've done with my own NTSC version Ketsui Super Replay DVD-R disc. Honestly, my ESP.ra.de Super Replay DVD-R disc looks better than my Ketsui DVD-R disc as my DV camcorder was set to manual-focus and it looks absolutely razor-sharp (with video capture from a 14" RGB monitor).
PC Engine Fan X! ^_~