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Gear / Technical Help => Photo / Video Recording => Topic started by: xjsb125 on July 16, 2016, 08:10:31 PM
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I recently unearthed some miniDV tapes that I wanted to get transferred and edited. They were originally recorded on a Panasonic PV GS500, which was sadly stolen a few years ago. I still have a Canon HV30, and my desktop is old enough that I still have a firewire port on it. Since upgrading to Windows 10, I hadn't used a firewire connection for anything. I fired up Vegas 13 Pro and attempted to capture one of my tapes, and I keep getting an error that Sony Capture can't connect to my device. No problem, I'll just fire up VirtualDub. Same issue. Premiere Pro. Same issue. NeoScene. Same issue. I tried installing an alternate driver for my firewire port. Still no luck. In research I haven't had any luck finding a solution that works. Has anyone else had a similar issue?
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First guess is that W10 didn't install a FW driver when you upgraded. I would check on your motherboard manufacturer's site for W10 drivers. There's unlikely to be a separate one for FW, but are likely packages in the chipset driver package.
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This reminds me how much i always hated firewire and mini dv.
Not that this will help your problem but i had a similar issue years ago and the only thing that solved my problem was JMICRON firewire driver.
Good luck.
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Does this help?
https://www.studio1productions.com/Articles/Firewire-1.htm
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Try WinDV. It's a simple DV capture program for SD video. I never captured with Vegas even though I edit with it.
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Does this help?
https://www.studio1productions.com/Articles/Firewire-1.htm
Still no luck after that. I'm wondering if it's not with the port itself, and not a software issue. I'll keep entertaining suggestions, and I really appreciate you guys giving out your ideas. Thanks!
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What does it show in Device Mangler? Is the device there? Does the icon have a warning or error icon?
Also, maybe poke around in the BIOS to make sure that it's enabled?
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What does it show in Device Mangler?
:clapping:
I can't believe I never heard this one before back in my computer repair tech days.
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In the device manager, the 1394 controller shows the legacy driver installed. The warning exclamation is not present. That's actually one of the first things I looked for, to see if there was a problem or device conflict. The camera itself, when connected and turned on, shows up in the device manager as well, under the sound, video, and game controllers controllers.
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Did you run Microsoft's 'Windows 10 upgrade advisor' thingie (or whatever it was called) before the upgrade? I ran it, and it provided a list of devices that would work or not work.
Agree with the previous comment to go to the motherboard manufacturer's driver site and see if you can find their win10-specific driver (it's not clear which drivers you've tried). What is the manufacturer and model firewire chip? I have also, in a few cases, been able to locate drivers directly from those companies.
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Last night about an hour after I posted, I restarted my desktop, and the damn thing finally connected. Thank you all very much for your help!
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Had you restarted previously during the time you were trying to get the firewire to work?
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To quote my wife "If you restart that damn thing one more time, I'll throw it out in the yard."
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Of course you know already not to disconnect the FW while the power is on or you may be throwing the card or the camera in the yard after the port gets fried.
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Of course you know already not to disconnect the FW while the power is on or you may be throwing the card or the camera in the yard after the port gets fried.
This. FW does not like hot-plugging, which is easy to forget after using USB devices so often.