I'm looking for a Windows 10 software solution that will help me import older VHS and camcorder videos and subsequently edit them. I have the Canopus ADVC110 device, which connects via IEEE1394 (firewire). I know some folks who work with Vegas Pro that speak highly of Vegas Pro for video import. I have the following related questions:

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The ADVC-110, AFAIK, does not have upgradeable firmware, and certainly doesn't have Windows 10 software drivers. It uses your Firewire card, which is run by the standard Microsoft Firewire/IEEE1394 driver. These drivers might not be installed automatically.

My struggle is over! I built my (now) system 2 in 2011 when DV was king and MPEG 2 was just coming onto the scene and I needed a more powerful system to cope. Since then we've advanced to MP4 and to bigger and bigger resolutions. I was really suffering, not so much in editing (with proxies) but in encoding, which just took ages. A video, with Neat Video noise reduction applied, would encode at 12% of film speed. My new system 1 does the same job at 160% of film speed. Marvellous. I'm keeping my old system as a capture station for analogue video tapes and DV.

I have a Green Valley (aka Canopus) ACE DVio PCI card in my computer (so admittedly internal rather than a external unit) and it performs flawlessly, capturing to Movie Edit Pro, Video Pro X and Scenealyzer. The card includes a firewire port. I also have a separate PCI card with two full size and one miniature ports, which I use all the time for my external MOTU Audio Interface, as well as for those times when I need to download video files from FW-equipped video cameras. This card has a TI Chipset, which is/was often recommended as the best type to use, for reliability etc. (It has never let me down!)

With regard to drivers, in the early days of Win 10 it was necessary to find and install the Legacy FW drivers since the default install by W10 was a newer driver which often did not work. (I'm still running that Legacy driver, though I think that the "standard" W10 one may now be usable.)

I was trying to find the manufacturers website and all links went to the Grass Valley site. I could not find any information there and they no longer sell those cards. I did say 'may not be possible' as I wasn't sure. In fact there are so many of those cards for sale second hand at present it got me wondering as to why.

I found only 4 on Ebay, and they're being sold not because they are bad but because they've outlived their usefulness; I suspect people have finished their transfer of analogue video, which is what these are/were used for. Also, many new computers/motherboards don't have Firewire ports.

Now if @Jeff-Reed doesn't have a Firewire card in his machine, he could consider buying a USB capture stick. But that is going down a deep rabbit hole and is not for the faint-hearted (or shallow pocketed). Otherwise, there's nothing wrong with DV, especially PAL DV, for analogue video transfer. I have fond memories of working with DV: fast, with timecode, scene detection that works. Great stuff.

Thanks everyone for your responses. To be clear, I have the external canopus ADVC 110 device, not a PCI card version. I was assuming I would need to buy a PCI card with a FireWire port to see if the canopus external device would be recognized.

Since my Dell XPS 8930 Tower does not have a firewire port, I figure I would start by getting a firewire card. However, if there are more current PCI video capture cards that are stable with a particular software I AM OPEN (correction) to starting over regarding capture devices/cards.

Firewire is an old connection type/protocol which has to all intents been superseded by USB to the point where support for the standard started being dropped from around 2008 onwards to the point where they were removed from Windows 8 onwards. Windows 10 drivers are very rare as they must be 64 bit drivers, 32 bit drivers will not work with modern 64 bit programs

The alternative is to get a good quality USB video capture device however you need to ensure it is compatible with Windows 10 and has 64 bit drivers - for most of the cheap devices you find on Amazon and elsewhere, the hardware/drivers may not match up to the claims.

As I mentioned at the start, there are other, free, programs for "capturing" DV. In fact, I don't like using MEP because it won't split files by date. This makes it easier to archive. My normal workflow is to capture with WinDV or Scenealyzer then edit and output to DVD or MP4 with MEP.

On the reviews it sounded like a previous version of the card or previous Windows 10 OS did not have drivers for this. I looked over the link you posted also. From the reviews of this product, it sounds like a lot of users had issues when they installed legacy drivers. Newer users report that the current Windows 10 OS version immediately recognizes the card in some cases. Most of the people who had trouble with this card appeared to be trying to use it as a connection to an audio interface.

Currently, my Firewire port is on the motherboard. When I clean-installed Win 10 in 2017 (and later) I didn't update or install any IEEE1394 drivers; Windows did it automatically. As I mentioned at the start, MEP will possibly work. Mine doesn't, but that could be because my setup is a huge dog's breakfast of software and codecs. WinDV will similarly not work, but Scenealyzer does, which indicates to me that my IEEE1394 drivers are OK.

I'll do some test captures with my ADVC-100 and compare them with my IOData GV-USB2 USB capture stick. The NTSC purists hate DV captures of analogue video with a passion (eg through an ADVC-XXX), but there is no question that if you have a DV source eg your video camera, you should use Firewire to capture it (or more correctly, "transfer" it).

I don't think my capture card is available any longer but, essentially, your ADVC is an "external" version of it anyway! So, having one is not going to offer any real benefit over your unit.

As others have pointed out, the problem for you is to have a suitable firewire card and port As I wrote before, I have such ports on both the ACE DVio card and on a separate PCI card; both work without problem in Win 10. Having had a quick look at the entries for them under Device Manager they seem to both be using the Legacy Win 10 FW driver. If, having installed your new card, you find that Windows doesn't "see" it, try installing that Legacy driver. If you scroll down this page you will find instructions on how to go about this. 152ee80cbc

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