I've got the means, but it'd be a hell of a long job.
Each tape would require the 3 hours to record it to the computer hard drive, then another 3 or so hours to encode it to dvd video, then just half an hour to an hour to burn and verify it on a DVD disc. I think 3 hours can be fit on one dvd-r, but would have to see what the quality looked like.
That's not 3 hours of constant attention, you can set it going and leave it, but the computer would be in use the whole time, during capturing you couldn't use the computer for anything that might tax the CPU, and when you're encoding it to DVD, it'll be using all the CPU it can so anything you try running will be slow.
I had a look at
www.qmb.co.nz (computer store) and they've got a PixelView video capture card that says it encodes straight to mpeg2 (which is I think the compression that DVD's use) so at a guess that might cut the time in half - but I'm not sure.
If you've got about 40GB of free harddrive space, a fast enough computer (at a guess over 1GHz would be ok) and a dvd burner, all you'd need would be a $80 tv capture card and some free software. And lots of time!
Going by what
these guys charge, it'd be just under a grand for the 16 dvd's (they'd also have to be dual layer, according to them, but I still think 3 hours might be possible on a single layer dvd-r).
Sorry I can't help, it's just too big a job and I use my computer too much to be able to devote that much time to converting videos.
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