Excess space capturing 4x3 video

This is my first time using OBS so please excuse me if my problem has an obvious answer.

I am trying to capture an old wedding video from a VCR. No matter what I have tried with the settings, the resulting file I create on my computer has excess black space on the right side of the captured video (see screenshot below). I assume this is due to a problem with the aspect ratio but I have not yet been able to fix it. Both my base and canvas are currently set at 1280x720 but I have tried other settings without success.

Here is my log file:

Thanks in advance for your help.

OBS Screenshot.jpg
 
1280x720 is a 16:9 aspect ratio.
Try 1280x960 (which is 4:3), or better-yet just right-click the capture source and use 'Resize Output (Source Size)'.
 
@FerretBomb mmmmmmmmmmh when you fix the source to the screen all persons are Fat ;) beter is set the video source in the middle so ist look good on new 16:9 TVs and monitors or overscan it make the picture bigger than is it !
When you're capturing from a 4:3 source to digital video (as pinnacle-project seems to be), NOT streaming to a forced 16:9 player, maintaining the original format is preferable unless you absolutely NEED to convert it to another AR. Most video players will intelligently center and columnbox 4:3 content being played back fullscreen on a 16:9 monitor without aspect-stretching. There's no need to 'bake in' columnboxes, or even worse to crop off part of the source video to make it fit the current display standard.
Heck, I do this when capturing stock footage from classic 4:3 game consoles, as it makes editing much easier and keeps the quality as high as possible, as far down the production pipeline as possible.
 
so does OBS capture a 4 x 3 aspect as just that, sources are PAL 25 fps 720 x 576 (typical Australia off-air VHS)?
 
so does OBS capture a 4 x 3 aspect as just that, sources are PAL 25 fps 720 x 576 (typical Australia off-air VHS)?
You can set OBS to do so by setting the Canvas to whatever resolution you like. Beyond that it comes down to what resolutions your capture device supports.
 
I've got a average tape Magix MEP didn't capture frames it doesn't like but OBS easily did it so I thought maybe the highest input and output 1920 x 1080, Wondershare to crop it (to the resolution mentioned) to insert into MEP for DVD?
 
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