8mm & Super 8 Film to Digital Converter, Film Scanner Digitizer with 2.4″ Screen, Convert 3” 5” 7” 9” Reels into 1080P Digital MP4 Files,Sharing & Saving on 32GB SD Card

$ 96.22

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The media could not be loaded.Someone else wrote to put the instruction manual under the front of the device – and I agree that helps when pushing the buttons.Some other tips I have for Novice 8mm Home Movie Converters:* SD card – tape down the locking tab on the SD card.my first time trying to record I got the message that the SD Card was not available. I formatted and tried again. I ejected the SD card – and realized the SD card tab was in the “locked” position. Flipped to unlocked, reinserted and tried again – Same message. Ejected the card to replace with another I had – and noticed the tab was in the lock position again. So I applied a piece of cellophane tape over the notch tightly so that the tab could not move – reinserted the card, and was able to start recording.* Clean the foot the film runs through after running each reel. Dust and particles will need to be cleaned off the foot that holds the film in place as it passes to capture the images. A cloth and a “puff brush” are provided and are helpful, but I also used cotton buds (make sure they are the tight, hard tip type, so as not to introduce loose fibers) to wipe the path clean. They also come in handy to help feed the film under the clips in the foot mechanism.* Use the mechanism to open AND close the foot over the film – don’t just click closed. It’s only plastic, you’ll wear out the clip.* If you have a shorter reel – use that one first – I ran my first reel a few times to get the hang of positioning* This takes long. It’s taking a individual image of each frame. A three minute reel will take 30 minutes to complete. I included a video clip to show how s-l-o-w this runs. It is taking a shot of each frame – and these films in a projector would run at 15 frames per second.* You will need to babysit and stay with the device during the process. You can’t walk away for a while and expect to come back when it’s near done. I had a leader (the white part that feeds through before the film starts) break off as it was going into the foot, and had spliced film get stuck a few times because it was not spliced well. Plus just checking on your home movies while running thru gives you a chance to figure out how you want to edit once you have it in it’s digital format, jot notes of what music would be great in the background. These YOUR family memories, and the advantage of doing yourself is putting correct period music (or sound effects) to your family stories. Something that would not happen if you send off to get processed.After ProcessingOnce I had the reel processed – I left the SD Card in and opted to use the USB transfer cable to copy over to my Windows laptop. Once on my laptop, I was going to use the highly recommended OSB Studio (free) – but found it a little too much of a learning curve for my use. I was able to get great results using Microsoft’s ClipChamp (free version) that has an easy and pretty intuitive interface to drag and drop my clips and then add titles, transitions, sound, and other effects. Exporting to 720p was plenty of resolution to enjoy up on my 50″ TV at home.I was fortunate that my old movies were stored in a cool (and dry) back corner of a garage. My 8mm reels were in pretty good condition and the film itself did not show cracks, splits or broken sprocket holes. If your film has issues – the conversion may not go as smoothly as mine did.Hope this info is helpful to someone who wants to convert those old home movies! [...]
Memproses…