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Tapes recorded on one camcorder very rarely play back satisfactorily on another machine - you will have to use your old camcorder to view them, or else get them transferred to DVD
Unfortunately, no. By recording in fast mode, the camera captured fewer frames than usual. When played back at the normal speed, the action appears faster than normal. Because the camera recorded fewer frames, there is no way to make up for the images that were not captured. You could slow down the playback, but the result would be a jerky, jumpy video. Now, if you had accidentally captured the video in slow motion, you could then throw away some of the intervening frames and recreate a normal-speed video.
U have play back problems on playback SP LP SLP modes tuggles problems.Try website like Remotes.com to buy the tv original remote,have these buttons to set the correct VHS tape play back modes tuggles problems.
you can't ! you have to slow you footage afterwards. Anyway, try to record with a slow speed shutter (1/30th of a second or less) to fluidify your images but if you want to slow down your footage, it's probably because the scene is "fast" and this doesn't could help you anyway !!!
Make sure you are shooting your movies in "Standard" mode. If you have the mode set to something else, especially "Time Lapse", the playback may not match 'natural' motion.
In any case, you can control the speed of the playback. When you first enter the movie playback mode, there should be a movie control bar along the bottom of the LCD. Instead of the "Play" button, select the "Slow Motion Playback" button (single arrow with single bar next to the normal Play button), and control the speed with the left or right arrows on the multi-controller.
Hi, the solution to the problem seems to be the following. When u press play, once, you get 1x play. If whilst playing you press play a second time the DS-30 goes into slow play mode, and if you press a second time it goes into fast mode. For those of us who accidentally went into either fast or slow mode, just press the play button again, during playback, until "play" appears on the LCD screen. Apparently it is as simple as that.
VCR's automatically detect what speed the present tape was recorded
at. It only gives you a choice of speeds when doing the
recording. If you are saying that it won't playback a tape
recorded in one of the slow speeds, it is most likely because VCR's
with more than two heads use different combinations of them in
different speeds and the ones used for slow speeds are maybe needing
cleaning. If this is the case, the vcr will seem to be playing
OK, but the video playback will be bad.
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