Past customers have found inexpensive solutions available on eBay or Amazon. Here's their reply:īased on the issue described, it sound like you are in need of a time base corrector. The Blackmagic support people did reply to my question I asked on their website. Example - if I use a tape that had one long shot of my kids' play, it is not as bad as when I'm capturing a tape from vacation, with a lot of starts/stops. It seems like it might get worse when there are a lot of stops/starts when the video was originally recorded. But I really do suspect that it's meant for some other capture device that's more software based than the Intensity Pro. I was hoping to find this "Desktop Video" software and try it instead. I was wondering if a cheap USB capture device might allow a little looser quality through and stay in sync, but maybe that's just wishful thinking. I'd rather not buy another capture device, though I'm not sure they'd work any better. I want to get this video captured so I can be done moving all these home videos to computer. I'm not sure it'll even work with the Intensity Pro 4K card I have.Īre there any options for me on this? I don't have a timebase correction thingy. I've searched the web for this software but can't find it. Some people have also said they've fixed the problem by going to an earlier version of some Blackmagic software called "Desktop Video" and specifically a Version 10.9.11 or 10.4.3. Searching the forum, there's some time correction device people usually use to successfully get this corrected (but some people have not been successful with this either).
Looking on the forum, this appears to to be a time/sync issue. I've captured many hours of video but most of it is all out of sync. The video cameras and VCR I'm playing the tapes on are probably out of whack also. My old VHS, VHS-C and Hi8 tapes are many years past their prime. Yes, I've searched and believe I know the answer to the problem I'm having.