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miroVIDEO DC30 Series User´s Guide
V
ID
C
AP
VidCap aborts with a General Protection Failure.
Internal VidCap application failure.
The standard VidCap setting is to place the capture file on
C:\CAPTURE.AVI
. To use a different drive, change the drive designator.
After doing this, VidCap may abort because of a supposed protection violation.
Immediately restart VidCap, ignore the error message stating that the desired
device is already in use, and specify the desired drive. Then close VidCap and
restart Windows 95/Windows 98.
VidCap does not save audio data. You must therefore check, and possibly reset,
any audio data before every recording.
A
UDIO PROBLEMS
The video is digitized, but not the audio.
Please work through the following steps in order and check after each step, by
making a new recording, whether the problem has been solved yet.
1.
Import the recorded AVI file into a Premiere project and drag the file into the
timeline. Is there a rectangle on the video track and another on the audio
track?
If there is only a rectangle on the video track, then the AVI file does not
contain a soundtrack.
In this case, you probably switched off audio recording during digitizing.
Activate audio recording in Adobe Premiere or in the miroVIDEO Capture
application. See the Premiere User Guide or this Guide starting on page 68).
2.
If the AVI file contains an audio track, then set Adobe Premiere so that the
waveform of the soundtrack is shown. To do this, you must increase the
resolution of the timeline window until each individual frame can be seen,
and the, if necessary, scroll in the window.
If you do NOT see a horizontal line there, then you also recorded audio. In
this case, you have a playback problem.
3.
If you really see a horizontal line in point 2., then first check whether your
source is actually delivering an audio signal and whether the cables are in
good repair. To do this, instead of connecting the audio cable to the audio
inputs of the miroVIDEO DC30 series, connect them directly to your
television set (or to an unused input of an amplifier). If you do not hear any
sound now, then there may not be any audio on the original tape, or the audio
output is deactivated on your source (player), or the cables used are
defective.