I want to start today's Guide with a few questions:
Why do you want to get a Capture Card? Do you want to capture a console? Skip the next questions and read the next paragraph, else read on. If you answered the last question with no, do you plan on using the Capture Card in a two-PC setup? If you answered this question with yes, skip to the next paragraph. If you answered the question with no:
Pass-through means your capture card offers the same kind of Inputs as an Output to attach a Monitor/TV "after" the capture card. Normally this pass-through should not interfere with the signal so you should get no delay or color difference. The reality can look different though and some capture cards have reported delays/color distortions when using this option. In this case a splitter would be a good choice. Lets get back to the output you want to capture:
Now that we know what Input our capture card should offer, we have to make sure the capture card will be able to "read" our Output from our Source.
Some cards also report to take 1080p 60fps input and output it as 1080p 30fps, while in reality they convert it to a interlaced signal, which often reduces the quality by quite some margin. Check reviews or ask people that use your desired device to make sure this is not the case. In my capture card comparison list I tried to add these info as exactly as I could gather them on the manufacturers homepages. As mentioned earlier, a few capture cards also offer a hardware encoder which can in certain scenarios reduce your CPU usage while recording to zero. The downside of these encoders is their need for a higher bitrate to achieve the same quality a CPU encoding would reach. So they can be used for local recordings in which bitrate and bandwidth is no problem while for live streaming you would want to use your CPU.
At this point we know what ports our capture card needs and what resolutions it has to support. With the ports we normally also secured that we can receive audio of our Source with the capture card. In some cases it can be needed to differ from the usual setup, but its hard to keep every possible setup covered with this guide. If you have questions, just post them below. So last but not least we have to make sure we have an available PCI-E slot, or a free USB port to connect our new device. Again, check reviews of the device, talk to someone that uses it, check the forums of the streaming/recording tool you want to use with it for known problems, make sure you can return it if its not what you wanted and ask someone with knowledge before changing hardware if you have never done this before.
Feedback, criticism, comments are always welcome.
Edit (2014/08/11): Unless you want to capture a Camera or Console:
Why do you want to get a Capture Card? Do you want to capture a console? Skip the next questions and read the next paragraph, else read on. If you answered the last question with no, do you plan on using the Capture Card in a two-PC setup? If you answered this question with yes, skip to the next paragraph. If you answered the question with no:
- a Capture Card gives no significant performance boost anymore, compared to traditional capture methods
- a Capture Card can be used to circumvent problems of such traditional capture methods
- a Capture Card can increase the load on your system compared to traditional capture methods
- actual Hardware Encoders capabilities are inferior to CPU encoding techniques -] not designed for live streaming, only recording
- What Outputs does my Source I want to capture offer, and do I need to split or can I "clone/double" the Output to two different ports?
Pass-through means your capture card offers the same kind of Inputs as an Output to attach a Monitor/TV "after" the capture card. Normally this pass-through should not interfere with the signal so you should get no delay or color difference. The reality can look different though and some capture cards have reported delays/color distortions when using this option. In this case a splitter would be a good choice. Lets get back to the output you want to capture:
- Consoles
- HDMI / RCA / SCART / Composite / RGB
- Computer
- HDM / VGA / DVI / DP / (older PCs might have S-VHS/Composite)
- Cameras / Webcams
- HDMI / FireWire / RCA / probably others
Now that we know what Input our capture card should offer, we have to make sure the capture card will be able to "read" our Output from our Source.
- old Consoles
- Progressive: 256 × 224, 256 × 240, 512 × 224, 256 × 239, 512 × 239
- Interlaced: 512 × 448, 512 × 478
- current gen Consoles
- Progressive: 1280 × 720, 1920 × 1080(rarely)
- Interlaced formats are supported but not recommended
- coming Consoles
- Progressive: 1280 × 720(will still be used), 1920 × 1080(more often), maybe 4K
- Interlaced formats are supported but not recommended
- Computer
- Progressive: all kinds of resolutions, 720p/1080p preferred
- Interlaced formats are supported but not recommended
- Cameras
- Different Formats depending on your Model, Aspect Ratio, etc.
Some cards also report to take 1080p 60fps input and output it as 1080p 30fps, while in reality they convert it to a interlaced signal, which often reduces the quality by quite some margin. Check reviews or ask people that use your desired device to make sure this is not the case. In my capture card comparison list I tried to add these info as exactly as I could gather them on the manufacturers homepages. As mentioned earlier, a few capture cards also offer a hardware encoder which can in certain scenarios reduce your CPU usage while recording to zero. The downside of these encoders is their need for a higher bitrate to achieve the same quality a CPU encoding would reach. So they can be used for local recordings in which bitrate and bandwidth is no problem while for live streaming you would want to use your CPU.
At this point we know what ports our capture card needs and what resolutions it has to support. With the ports we normally also secured that we can receive audio of our Source with the capture card. In some cases it can be needed to differ from the usual setup, but its hard to keep every possible setup covered with this guide. If you have questions, just post them below. So last but not least we have to make sure we have an available PCI-E slot, or a free USB port to connect our new device. Again, check reviews of the device, talk to someone that uses it, check the forums of the streaming/recording tool you want to use with it for known problems, make sure you can return it if its not what you wanted and ask someone with knowledge before changing hardware if you have never done this before.
Feedback, criticism, comments are always welcome.
Edit (2014/08/11): Unless you want to capture a Camera or Console: