>>2554069How I captured my laserdiscs was that I used a DVD/VHS recorder with S-Video in that can output through HDMI in 1080p.
My first attempt I used an Elgato HD60 (which I had to use an HDMI splitter to strip the HCDP from the DVD/VHS recorder) and then I used Adobe Premiere and Audition to resize the image correctly and to do some noise cancellation (although you could probably do it with Audacity for editing the audio which would introduce more steps.).
However one thing I discovered with Elgato is that they don't use constant frame rates but variable frame rates when capturing video. That will not work with any professional non-linear editors however the newer version of Adobe Premiere CC has an option now to mess with variable frame rate video.
My new workflow is that I capture stuff with an Atomos Ninja Infernal. A little overkill but it works perfectly for what I need it for.
I have my own project that I'm trying to work on but I have been very slow at getting around to it because of work.
Working on digitizing the Rumik (Rumic) World OAVs from Japanese Laserdiscs.
Anyways, the easiest thing that could work for you is probably to get a DVD/VHS recorder and just dub it over from the VHS to a DVD-R. I have a Sony RDR-VX560 and works just fine.
After you capture them on DVD-R you could rip them into some flavor of MP4 with Handbrake.
There are cheap DVRs on Amazon now but I don't know if they have video inputs.
Anyways, that's if you want to. No pressure.