paulears
Veteran
I'm old - so this is a video clip, originated on hi-8 when Sony released it in the UK
I have come through all these formats.
U-Matic low band
U-Matic High Band
Beta
beta-SP
VHS
S-VHS
Betamax
8mm
Hi-8
Philips 1500 series
Philips 1700 series
Philips/Grundig Video 2000
DVC
DVC-pro
B type reel to reel
C Type reel to reel
nearly forgot - at Anglia TV we had Panasonic MII
What's been forgotten is that within all these - some makes and models were really good, and were solid images with reliability and excellent performance.
For example - the very mechanical Sanyo 9300 beta machine was really tough in homes, as were the piano key operated Fergusons in VHS - easy to service, and good stability.
Some beta machines, like the Sony F1 was able to record digital audio with the optional unit - and a great product.
The broadcast machines were pretty good too - the Sony U-matics - 1850 stick in my head as a reliable one. I never used B format reel to reel, but the Ampex C format could go a couple of generations without getting soft. The hi-8 machines in that video were good - I still have a 9000 I found in the store - bought after that product release and what the tape was recorded on.
Of course we had good and bad tapes, good and bad maintenance and good and bad models.
We have got fixated on resolution and pixels and screen formats now - but the image in the late 70s from a u-matic at about 240 lines on a 27" Trinitron was damn good. Customers back then also had very variable quality TVs too. A 600 pound Panasonic or Sony looked visibly better than the 280 pound Sanyo or Hitachi. generally, beta was better, but VHS more popular - simply because of the market saturation from the small number of big sales outlets who tended NOT to do beta. For rental - popular back then, the Ferguson, made by JVC was also available in a Baird brand and a couple of others - rebadged products that gave the impression VHS was everywhere. Sony, Sanyo and Toshiba tried to hold on, but in the UK the battle was lost. VHS won.
Having gone through all these - none were head or shoulder above for picture quality - that was capped by the systems available - signal to noise, stability and copy loss being the critical things. In the video there is I think an early digital machine, was it called D1? Huge thin tapes?
I have come through all these formats.
U-Matic low band
U-Matic High Band
Beta
beta-SP
VHS
S-VHS
Betamax
8mm
Hi-8
Philips 1500 series
Philips 1700 series
Philips/Grundig Video 2000
DVC
DVC-pro
B type reel to reel
C Type reel to reel
nearly forgot - at Anglia TV we had Panasonic MII
What's been forgotten is that within all these - some makes and models were really good, and were solid images with reliability and excellent performance.
For example - the very mechanical Sanyo 9300 beta machine was really tough in homes, as were the piano key operated Fergusons in VHS - easy to service, and good stability.
Some beta machines, like the Sony F1 was able to record digital audio with the optional unit - and a great product.
The broadcast machines were pretty good too - the Sony U-matics - 1850 stick in my head as a reliable one. I never used B format reel to reel, but the Ampex C format could go a couple of generations without getting soft. The hi-8 machines in that video were good - I still have a 9000 I found in the store - bought after that product release and what the tape was recorded on.
Of course we had good and bad tapes, good and bad maintenance and good and bad models.
We have got fixated on resolution and pixels and screen formats now - but the image in the late 70s from a u-matic at about 240 lines on a 27" Trinitron was damn good. Customers back then also had very variable quality TVs too. A 600 pound Panasonic or Sony looked visibly better than the 280 pound Sanyo or Hitachi. generally, beta was better, but VHS more popular - simply because of the market saturation from the small number of big sales outlets who tended NOT to do beta. For rental - popular back then, the Ferguson, made by JVC was also available in a Baird brand and a couple of others - rebadged products that gave the impression VHS was everywhere. Sony, Sanyo and Toshiba tried to hold on, but in the UK the battle was lost. VHS won.
Having gone through all these - none were head or shoulder above for picture quality - that was capped by the systems available - signal to noise, stability and copy loss being the critical things. In the video there is I think an early digital machine, was it called D1? Huge thin tapes?
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