Comments

emmrecs wrote on 8/11/2023, 2:08 PM

@Karen-Scott

Welcome to the Magix user to user forums.

I use a similar camera for a similar purpose, also connected via Firewire but feeding into either Magix Movie Studio or Video Pro X. Unfortunately, the now discontinued Firewire protocol is not without its foibles, not the least of which is the driver which Windows installs for it; it can often be the "wrong"one!

So first, we need to discover whether Windows/your computer can actually "see" your firewire port(s). If you know how to access Device Manager check the listing for "IEEE 1394 Host Controllers". Tell us what is shown there. You may have one or more drivers listed, assuming that your FW port(s) are seen.

If you don't know how to access Device Manager perhaps the easiest method is as follows: right-click on the Windows Start icon (bottom left corner of your desktop screen). From the menu that opens, clcik on Device Manager.

Do report back on what you find!

One caveat: it is possible that Video Saver may not be able to use a firewire connection since it is most commonly used with a USB dongle, being a comparatively low cost software with limited features.

HTH

Jeff
Forum Moderator

Win 10 Pro 64 bit, Intel i7 Quad Core 6700K @ 4GHz, 32 GB RAM, NVidia GTX 1660TI and Intel HD530 Graphics, MOTU 8-Pre f/w audio interface, VPX, MEP, Music Maker, PhotoStory Deluxe, Photo Manager Deluxe, Xara 3D Maker 7, Samplitude Pro X7 Suite, Reaper, Adobe Audition 3, CS6 and CC, 2 x Canon HG10 cameras, 1 x Canon EOS 600D, Akaso EK7000 Pro Action Cam

AAProds wrote on 8/11/2023, 8:38 PM

@Karen-Scott @emmrecs

I've just tested a DV camera on Video Easy 7 and it will pick up the camera and record the video OK (black screen while recording but the transfer come out OK).

I think the issue will be as Jeff says: a Firewire driver problem. Up to Win 7, FW worked OK. Windows 10 was bad, and needed the old, legacy driver re-installed manually. Win 11 improved things somewhat.

A screenshot of your Device Manager will help, with the "IEEE1394 host controllers" bit expanded. I have written a blurb on the problem here:

http://aaproductions.net/dvtransfer.htm#xl_HeadingAnchor:58wwmu6

All my forum comments are based on or refer to my System 1.

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.

System 1

Windows 11 v23H2 severely modified by Openshell and ExplorerPatcher

Power supply: 850W Cooler Master (should have got modular)

CPU: Intel i7 13700K running at 3400mhz, cooled by a Kraken 2x140mm All In One liquid cooler.

RAM: 64gb (2x32gb sticks) G.Skill "Ripjaws" DDR4 3200Mhz

GPU 1: iGPU UHD 770

GPU 2: NVidia RTX 3060Ti Windforce 8gb

C drive: NVME 500gb

Various other SSD and HDDs.

Monitor: 27"/68cm Samsung, 2560 x 1440, 43 pixels/cm.

MEP 2021 version 20.0.1.80

Movie Studio 2023 version 22.0.3.172

Magix Video Easy version 7.0.1.145

System 2

(Still in use for TV and videotape capture)

Windows 10 v22H2

CPU: i5-750 at 2670mhz with 12gb RAM

Onboard IEEE1394 (Firewire) port

GPU: ATI Radeon HD 4770 (512mb) which is ignored by MEP

Hard drives: C Drive 256gb SSD, various other HDDs.

Monitor: Dell 22"/56cm, 1680x1050, 35 pixels/cm

MEP 2021 version 20.0.1.80

Movie Studio 2023 version 22.0.3.172

VPX 12