Check the RF Coaxial output (RF) Conectors, if that is the VCR RF
signal output, such as channel 3 or 4 output, you can connect it to
DVD RF input.
Chech your manual, and make sure the RF output connector is not a
bypass of the RF input!
Yes it can be done, but unless you upgrade your equipment you will not
be satisfied with the result. For starters, yes you can use RF, but
the quality at the end will not be great. I personally would get a
new/used 4head stereo VCR with RCA out jacks. VCRs are dirt cheap
these days. Also get a short set of shielded RCA cables, trust me on
this one.
Ok so you need to play the movie while capturing it on your computer
(2 hrs). Then you need to encode and burn this video 2 hrs or more. No
matter what, you will always end up with less than VHS quality movies.
Yes some movies only come on VHS, so this is the route you will have
to take. If you can find the same movies on DVD at a movie rental
store or an online DVD rental souce you can copy those movies with DVD
Decrypter and DVD Shrink (both free) getting a DVD quality copy, with
less hastle in less than a quarter of the time.
Not that I care, but if you own a VHS of a movie, is it legal to copy
a rented DVD of the same movie? Technically you have a license to view
that movie.