

Your capture card will need to be able to accept HDMI inputs.

It will look a lot better than even the screenshot in your self-reply. I suggest getting something like a RetroTink 2X to line double the 240p signal to 480p, which modern devices are much more comfortable with. The most likely culprit is your capture card. The combing you're seeing means something is interpreting 240p (or 224p or whatever) as an interlaced signal. Your SNES footage is natively progressive scan, outside of occasional 480i title screens and such. I can't tell a difference between UYVY and YUV2 Format (bottom/audio): chose *sample= 48000, bit=16, ch= 2 (only option)Ī note on the format, the 360x240 options ( *w= 360, h= 240, fps=29.97, fcc=YUY2, bit=16) are still badly interlaced.(I'm in the US, using the 29.97 fps options).Audio Capture Device: changed to Conexant Polaris Audio Capture.Video Capture Device: Conexant Polaris Video Capture (only option).Here's a copy of the config, this is the only tab where I changed anything: There are a few different executables, I just ran AmaRecTV.exe. I downloaded the software and unzipped it, filename amarectv231_en.zip. Here's a screenshot of it the output, the interlacing issue I posted about is no longer present: It seems it was last updated in 2013, but this works on Windows 10. I've found some useful information in the following posts:īoth of these mention using some software called amarectv.
