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Participant
April 6, 2020
Question

DV Firewire to Windows using Apple adapters

  • April 6, 2020
  • 2 replies
  • 12753 views

Having had quite a battle with this I thought I'd put together some notes which it would have been very useful to be able to find in one place!

 

Objective

To capture Mini DV (not HDV but the principles should apply) tapes into Premier Pro 2020 on Windows. The DV camcorder, being 20 years old, has no USB port; only a Firewire 400 IEE1394 port. Computers have not been equipped with a Firewire port for a while now. In my case I have a mini ITX system with no PCI slot available for an internal Firewire card.

 

So my objective was to find a way to connect the camcorder to a USB port on my computer.

 

This article explains how I was able to connect the camcorder to a USB-C port, control the camcorder, and capture video successfully.

 

Requirements

  • Computer with a USB-C port. A USB-A (what most of understand as a USB connector!) 3.1 interface would probably work but I don't have a way to test it.
  • Camcorder!
  • Apple Firewire 800 to Thunderbolt 2 adapter.
  • Apple Thunderbolt 2 to Thunderbolt 3 (= USB-C) adapter.
  • Firewire 4 pin to 9 pin Firewire 800 cable. Plenty of these available cheap on Amazon.
  • Thunderbolt driver software for your motherboard. My motherboard is an Asrock so I got the software from their site. You might have a Gigabyte, MSI, Asus, etc. etc. motherboard. You will need to know which board you have so you can download the correct drivers.
  • Windows 10 legacy IEE 1394 driver package. You can get these here: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/2970191/firewire-port-based-device-does-not-work-correctly-in-windows-8-1-or-w Although it says these are for Windows 8.1 they work fine on Windows 10.

Setup

Depending on your Thunderbolt driver software, there may be a .exe or .msi file to launch the installer. If so then run it before you have any of your Apple adapters plugged in. If there are only .sys, .inf. etc. files, then you may need to use the Windows-X key combination to open Device Manager, find a device with a warning triangle next to it, and use the Update Driver button to locate your Thunderbolt drivers.

 

On my system this leaves a system tray icon which allows you to control whether Thunderbolt devices are allowed to connect and to view status. When things are working properly you should be able to see that an Apple Firewire to Thunderbolt 2 adapter is plugged in.

 

Leave the Device Manager open.

 

Important: Before connecting to the computer, connect the Apple Firewire to Thunderbolt 2 and Thunderbolt 2 to USB-C adapters together. The Thunderbolt 2 to USB-C adapter does not support hotplugging! Knowing this crucial fact will save you much frustration!!

 

Now connect the two Apple dongles to your computer's USB-C port. You should hear the usual "bing-bongs" as the devices are recognised. You will probably find that your USB-C Thunderbolt adapter has been recognised but the Device Manager will show a yellow triangle next to the IEEE 1394 host controller. To fix this select it, choose Update Driver, and navigate to the x_64 subfolder of the install location for the IEEE1394 legacy drivers, which by default will be in C:\Program Files (x86)\1394 OHCI Compliant Host Controller (Legacy).

 

It may be necessary to plug and replug the chain of dongles. You should then find that in Device Manager there is a working LSI 1394 OHCI Compliant Host Controller device showing- no yellow triangles etc.

 

You should now be set!

 

With your camcorder turned off, connect the firewire port on the camera to the Apple Firewire to Thunderbolt 2 adapter. Turn on the camcorder. If everything is working you should get another "bing bong" as the device is recognised.

 

Now start Premier Pro.

 

Go to the Device Control preferences and click "Options" next to DH/HDV Device Control. Select your make of camera from the menu, and perhaps the model if listed (my Sony camcorder was not listed and I left this setting at "Standard" and it works fine). Don't forget to choose the right video standard that reflects the tapes you want to capture. You may already find the device shows as "online" on this screen, although you will only see "online" if there's actually a tape inserted!

 

Click OK. Start a new project, then press F5 and you should be all setup to review your footage and capture it!

 

Hope this helps someone many hours of searching trying to get things working.

 

 

 

This topic has been closed for replies.

2 replies

Stan Jones
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 31, 2021

Still researching, but perhaps someone has tried this setup or has some ideas?

 

New computer and trying to avoid adding a firewire card re saving PCI-E slots and M.2 conflicts. Options are that or running an older computer with a firewire card.

 

Motherboard Gigabyte Z590 Vision D https://www.newegg.com/p/N82E16813145294

Has Intel Thunderbolt 4 via a USB-C connector.

 

I don't see a USB-C to Firewire adaptor, but from the discussions, I could try USB-C to Thunderbolt and Thunderbolt to Firewire.

 

DV camera 4 pin firewire to adaptor. Drivers to be determined....

 

I always like scenalyzer better than PR for capture, and it worked the last time I used it on Win10 with a firewire card.

 

What do you thing? Anyone know of a USB-C to Firewire adaptor? Drivers?

 

Stan

  

Legend
October 31, 2021

Stan asking a question instead of answering mine and many others?  I think I need a drink...

I've used an apple firewire 800 to thunderbolt 2 (or was it 1) adapter connected to a thunderbolt 2 to 3 adapter to capture from both a minidv deck and a hdv deck into premiere on a 2017 macbook pro without issues.   Not sure which version of Premiere... as it was at least 6 months ago.    If there's anything I can test for you, please let me know.  You've been an enormous help to me with captioning and encore workflows....

Stan Jones
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 31, 2021

lol, plenty of help needed. Good to know the basic adaptor operation "may" work.

 

Stan

 

Participant
November 8, 2020

Nice guide but I have same set up but couldn't get it to work, just to give people a idea I got a amd 3950x with am4 motherboard. And windows 10 can see the thunderbolt 2-3 but not the legacy 1394. After spending 5k on this new rig I'm wanting to sale it now lol 

 

so if anyone has a work around for drivers for a msi creation motherboard I would be thankful. I don't know for sure but I think it's because am4 msi doesn't have any thunderbolt drivers. Wishing I have intel board again

Legend
November 8, 2020

you might consider getting something like the blackmagic design itensity pro shuttle which will capture video from the deck via a variety of connections and input via usb3 to both macs and pcs in premiere.  As far as I know you will not have deck control with this, so timecode will not match source tapes but it does work at a reasonable price point.  It's also a great device to feed a 2nd monitor from premiere...  

Inspiring
November 9, 2020

In the article it states USB-C but I imagine it is a Thunderbolt 3 port. That being said the Blackmagic Design Intesnity Shuttle is not needed for capturing mini DV (DV-25). The Blackmagic Design Intensity Shuttle does not work for capturing old VHS tapes without a TBC (time base corrector). The Intenisty Shuttle is also discontinued. I would recommend the ADVC 110 (also discontinued) for VHS capture not the Intensity Shuttle. IEEE Firewire OHCI has always worked for me on any Windows System (even 8 and 10). I have never installed drivers. I have heard the latest version of OS X will not detect the OHCI Firewire port. The video below might be of some use. That being said the Intensity Shuttle is awesome for playback when used with Premiere Pro.


https://youtu.be/dVLUxRkPMdA