1/23/2024 0 Comments Hdmi capture card ebay![]() Sometimes, the audio would crackle and be slightly fuzzy at the beginning of a recording, and then disappear later on in the clip. On top of that there are some quirks I noticed when analyzing the capture afterwards. I can only recommend 1080i if you plan to use this as a DVR of sorts, and deinterlace your capture in post, using software like DaVinci Resolve or Handbrake. Disabling deinterlacing is unacceptable as well, as the interlace lines make playing games annoying and slightly disorienting. The display seems jerky, unstable and appears to drop frames if you deinterlace in OBS. 1080i though, (in games at least) is rough. Quality is good, sharpness is adequate for 720p and it would appear that 60 frames are being displayed every second. I’m sure there must be some kind of latency, but I can’t measure it, and I didn’t really notice either compared to my old Panasonic flatscreen. **Please note I’m referring to looking at the feed in OBS, not the recording itself** In 720p60Hz from a PS3, it’s pretty fluid. From using OBS as a viewer for the video feed, I’ve gathered two varying experiences. That said, if you use “Capture Audio Only” then you don’t have to worry about this issue. ![]() This presents an issue where because your system audio is being captured, any sounds in Windows like notifications or music will end up in the recording as well. What this does is route the capture audio to your system audio. If you intend to use OBS as a viewer like myself, you’ll need to set the audio output mode to “Output Desktop Audio”. Instead you have to fix your mistake, then restart your system, AND THEN you can get down to business. If my PS3 is outputting 720p60hz, but the settings in OBS are set to 1080i, I won’t get an image, it won’t correct itself and if you correct it, it still won’t output an image. If your device isn’t matched to the card’s settings in OBS, it won’t display anything until you reset everything and restart. ![]() It can do resolutions below that, but given that it’s an HDMI capture card I’d imagine that you would want to record in at least 720p. This card is capable of 720p at 60Hz, and 1080i at 60Hz. It really likes to be treated in it’s exact preference. This cute little card? Yeah it’s cold as hell. I’d describe the overall experience with the card with one word Fickle. It’s free, open-source, reliable, and easy to use. Instead, I’d recommend that if you need some capture software, use OBS. The included video capture software is utter garbage. Let it install, and once it’s complete, restart your PC to be thorough. After you startup your system with the card installed, open up the device manager in Windows, find the device which should be titled “multimedia controller”, right click on it, then click “update driver”, find the driver that was on the disk in your corresponding OS and distribution (32bit or 64bit). No extra sixpin like a hungry graphics card.ĭrivers aren’t particularly difficult. It’s a cute little card that you stick in an 1x PCIe slot and just requires a case screw. Installation of this card is as easy as you’d expect. Like a buildzoid of capture cards or something? ![]() If someone can analyze this PCB I’d be happy to provide some more detailed photos. You can take a look at the card through the provided photos. I’ve linked a Google Drive folder with the drivers at the bottom of this post. Alongside the OC, you get your capture device, a low profile PCIe bracket for like a Thinkcentre or something of that size, and a driver CD. 10/10 to the Chinese capture card overlords for the dank meme. You get some silica gels which is the next best thing to tide pods. It’s really something isn’t it? The optimus prime integration has to be a stolen PNG, but overall the packaging is comical, if not slightly uninteresting. When you open up the plastic ePacket, you’ll be greeted with the box. There isn’t all that much info on these things online so I thought I’d be the one to break the ice. I hope this post can be useful to people who come across these things and are intrigued/skeptical. This post will detail my experience with what is known as the “Timeleak HD72A”. Sixteen days later my capture card arrived. It was Christmas, and I thought “Hey, might as well treat myself. I hopped on eBay to find used Avermedia cards, when I came across a post for a “YK762H” capture card for something like $40. While that was in my budget, it was more than I wanted to spend. ![]() I looked at Elgato and Avermedia cards, and they ranged anywhere from $160 to $200 (Canadian dollars of course). You don’t get an ATX size board and use the one x16 slot, right? I had planned from early on to buy a capture card for my new Ryzen workstation, and so I searched. So as it were, I was looking to fill up some PCIe slots in my computer. ![]()
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