![]() ![]() ![]() Our goal is to give you the best customer experience possible, with a pristine transfer and fast, reliable shipping. Our facilities use the same processes approved and employed by the Academy of Motion Pictures, so you know you can trust the systems. Our experienced memory retrieval and preservation specialists (maybe we should just call them video transfer engineers) take every tape you send us through our rigorous process by hand, making sure that every frame gets the attention to detail and special treatment it deserves. You won’t lose any of the crispness, color vibrancy or resolution that you’ve gotten used to with your old videos. If you’ve got a bunch of PAL video that you need to transfer to NTSC to watch, our state of the art facility will get the job done quickly and beautifully. But Southtree has the medicine, and we’re here to help. The different frame rate and resolution standards make it impossible to watch them on many North American DVD players and TVs. But other than me being confused, all the info above still applies.Having a ton of treasured PAL video in North America can be a drag. Apparently the disc is NTSC and you need it to be PAL. All these programs are free (except Nero) and are available here at Major Geeks:ĮDIT- I just re-read your post I got my desciption backward, but the steps are the same. You can then either watch that on your PC, or convert it to a NTSC DVD and burn it using DVD Flick. As a last resort, you can rip the DVD using something like Auto Gordian Knot and you'll have an AVI file left. ![]() I know Nero will probably pop up a warning saying that the video is encoded as PAL and will ask if you want to burn it as PAL or NTSC, and you'll be allowed to choose. You can copy the DVD to a folder on your hard drive, then burn the folder as NTSC using Nero or another DVD burning software. As to copying from PAL to NTSC, it will probably be a bit of a process, but you can do it. I had a DVD player and I lost the remote and couldn't change from NTSC to PAL so any PAL discs wouldn't play. Check the manual, or use the 'setup' button on the remote. Your home DVD player should be able to play both PAL and NTSC discs. ![]()
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