If you want the disc to play a DVD video compliant folder structure that will play in almost any DVD player? Yes.
If you want the disc to simply contain the media file. No.
If you want both. No.
If quality is of any concern, it starts with the VHS player, and the capture device.
May I submit JVC/Panasonic/Sharp using S-video, and a Diamond VC-500?
If you have tapes that wiggle, you need a TBC
or a Panasonic ES-10/15/20 as a cheap pass-thru quasi TBC.
The very best captures are done in lossless AVI, but that is attained within a Cyberlink product only by a 32 bit version of PD.
Lossless eliminates the majority of compression artifacts from MPEG. Mosquito noise, muddy "fingerprints" in dark scenes, etc.
Your next best choice is to create a new MPEG capture profile, bump it up to 12,000 for archival purposes.
If you create your DVD structure but do not go to disc yet, as well as render to other file formats, you can put both versions on the same disc, allowing of course for space.
You can burn the DVD folders, and rendered files, as well as anything else you deem worthy such as labels, screen shots, information in Word or Notepad, all in one neat package using free Power2Go. The DVD will play in your player, and the other information will be accessible via computer optical drive.
This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at Aug 29. 2018 18:35
HP Envy Phoenix/4thGen i7-4770(4@3.4GHz~turbo>3.9)
Nvidia GTX 960(4GB)/16GB DDR3/
Canon Vixia HV30/HF-M40/HF-M41/HF-G20/Olympus E-PL5.
Tape capture using 6 VCR, TBC-1000, Elite BVP4+, Sony D8 camcorder with TBC.
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