● Liked this video? Subscribe for more:
Today’s episode details my experience trying to use a Dazzle DVC-90 capture device on Windows 10!
AV Capture Cards:
● Gear I use to make these videos:
Camera:
Tripod (mine is discontinued):
Smaller Tripod:
Microphone:
Editing Software (Premiere):
Thumbnail Editor (Photoshop):
● Affiliate Links (these links will earn me a commission if you purchase something though them at no additional cost to you):
Get a FREE 30-DAY TRIAL of Amazon Prime:
Get 2 FREE Audiobooks with Audible:
Try Twitch Prime for FREE:
Amazon:
● Follow Me:
Twitter:
Instagram:
● Music/Credits:
Background Music: & YouTube Audio Library
Airport Lounge by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
Mining by Moonlight by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
AcidJazz by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
Funkorama by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
Outro Music: Silent Partner – Bet On It
Source: YouTube Audio Library
Images Used (under Creative Commons):
Amazon Affiliate Notice: I am a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com. All Amazon links that I provide will use my affiliate code with Amazon.
Some materials in this video are used under Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976, which allows “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, commenting, news reporting, teaching, and research.
#MichaelMJD #Windows10 #Composite .
Table of Contents
Images related to the topic a technology use for video capturing

Capturing Composite Video on Windows 10 (with a 17 year old capture card) – Is It Possible?
Search related to the topic Capturing Composite Video on Windows 10 (with a 17 year old capture card) – Is It Possible?
#Capturing #Composite #Video #Windows #year #capture #card
Capturing Composite Video on Windows 10 (with a 17 year old capture card) – Is It Possible?
a technology use for video capturing
You can see more ways to make money here: see more here
You can see more ways to make money here: see more here
30 comments
I'm sure ffmpeg can do something, maybe not (it might be a non-standard protocol) but yeah… ffmpeg can do everything
I got my ancient easycap to work with Windows 10 x64, just took a while to track down the driver. I took mine apart and looked for the drivers for the chipset itself, and that worked for me.
VbVidCap and proper AV codecs (MJPEG for slow computers or H264 for more powerful ones) are the most efficient way to capture composite video with old USB2 or PCI video capture devices with Win XP.
That driver issue might be able to be resolved by disabling driver signature enforcement then re running the executable drivers usually run with kernel level privileges so windows is really picky about what drivers I will and won’t let you install
you could try running it in a vlc window, although I may be a little late with this comment
Aren’t dazzle capture cards like, the worst AV capture card??
I remember one channel made comments about how bad it is back when they did use them more regularly.
Where was you Video Last Video dislike
It's a bit late but did you try extracting the Windows 7 32-bit drivers with Universal Extractor 2 (and then 7zip) and installing them manually in Windows 10 (just because the installer isn't compatible doesn't necessarily mean that the drivers aren't)? I'm kinda curious about the max quality you could get out of this device with modern software 🙂
i know it's a bit late for this but i could have sworn there was a 3rd Windows Vista/7 driver column beside the 32-bit one. >_>
All the problems started when you ran QuickTime on Windows
Honestly? Just get a RetroTink5X and use an HD capture card.
21:44: How can Windows close its shell?
Make a adapter: VGA-Wii Video Output
Get a wii 2 hdmi
there was a 64 bit version to fyi
If you're interested in exploring the idea any further, there is something else you could try.
I own an old Pinnacle AV/DV2 capture card, that is plugged into PCI. (I didn't forget to say Express, I mean PCI.)
It came even with Pinnacle Studio 8 and a so-called BlueBox for AV inputs. I got it running on Windows 10 by installing the 32-bit edition.
It's really not that those old drivers don't work on Windows 10, they don't work on 64-bit OSes.
If you tinker around a bit, you should even be able to use it with OBS.
I just wish there was a way to pass through the PCI device to a VM, because currently I need to dual-boot.
Btw, which VM were you using in the video?
What Foodbar 2000 Theme D You Use
Try using obs
I have a possible video topic. How do you get your recorded DVDs in the video editor?
I was given a VCR/DVD combo that can burn DVDs and have no idea how to get the video from the disc.
But i want a free capture software that supports this
I recently bought a Dazzle DVD Recorded DVC100.
well first things first windows xp always saves the day i still use it
Most MSI files, or EXE setup files will create a directory in your temporary files, have that open before you launch the setup and then let the error sit there while you monitor the folder. It should extract all the files to the temporary folder, and you can just grab the drivers that way.
I've unfortunately had to do this multiple times with older technology and it's so far never not worked for me.
I got a file that will play in your version of QuickTime
XDDDDDDDDD THAT FREE AOL AND UNLIMITED INTERNET GOT ME SO GOOD XDDDD
use the Wii2HDMI adapter lol
just use a capture card
if you use 7zip or winrar you can unzip those exe files and get the driver files
Most likely it won't work because Win10 only accepts 64-bit drivers and your driver is made for WinXP 32-bit. Might give it a shot with Win10 32-bit.
Now I wonder if Ubuntu would've less issues with the capture card.