2018-11-01, 09:45 PM
(2018-11-01, 09:22 PM)crissrudd4554 Wrote: I never see it like that when watching VHS’ as is so naturally it shouldn’t be present in a capture right??
I mean, your capture is not necessarily your final delivery product. It's just the raw data. As said, the main danger with direct interlacing is that the deinterlacing algorithm is poor and that you may lose half the framerate. If on the other hand that is handled properly, sure, go with that.
With that said, many DVDs and Blu Rays (mainly documentaries and such) come with interlacing. A proper player will deinterlace on the fly anyway. For example MPC-HC does this. VLC has a deinterlacer too, though you have to usually activate it by hand.
I guess it comes down to what you need and what your desired end result is.