Talk:Video 2000
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Accuracy of statement on V2000 XL
editCan someone confirm or deny the accuracy of the following statement from this article: "VHS and Betamax sported slightly better display resolution" I'm not certain this is true, particularly of VHS which has a 240-line vertical resolution.
- Has anyone got evidence for this yet? I'm in agreement with the above poster (Colin99?) - any comparison with standard VHS was, in my opinion, always in the favour of the V2000. Indeed, I only upgraded to VHS when the ability to record stereo and Super VHS became available (at a reasonable price!)... C2r 23:19, 7 January 2007 (UTC)
Re. "Philips introduced a long-play cassette, the V2000 XL, with a capacity of eight hours per side." I think this is factually wrong, wasn't it the eXtended Play (XP) mode which provided eight hours per side, not the cassette itself? Comments please on both of the above. Colin99 21:19, 29 January 2006 (UTC)
This comment looks factually wrong:"Distribution of Video 2000 products began in 1979 and ended in 1998". Would that be 1988 perhaps? Colin99 20:41, 2 January 2007 (UTC)
Flipping the tape
editIntuitively, I'm sure that competitors to the Video 2000 must have presented the need to flip the tape as a disadvantage, rather then an advantage. VHS and Beta could utilize the entire tape area without flipping, so why limit the recorder to only be able to record on one half of the tape at a time? This serves no purpose other then to mimic a quirk of LPs and Audio Compact Cassettes, and it would reduce picture quality compared to utilizing the whole tape at once. Algr 19:03, 24 February 2006 (UTC)
- It did of course mean you didn't have to re-wind the tape - you could just flip it over to the other side to watch something else! C2r 23:19, 7 January 2007 (UTC)
- Philips were aware of a user perception, that the inability to flip the cassette represented a waste of recording time. At the time, the man in the street was well used to turning his medium over (be it a 78, a 33 or an audio cassette), to double the playing time. Philips reckoned that this ability to turn the cassette would pander to that perception and used it as a merketing tool. In spite of claims to the contrary, V2000 did give a noticeable improvement in video quality. Unfortunately there were two things that let the format down. One was the poor audio quality (though this could have been improved). The other was the lack of a portable, battery operated recorder for use with a camera (again something that could have been fixed). The real problem was that VHS had become so entrenched in the market place, that it had become almost impossible to dislodge.
- My father had a "portable" V2000. It was a Philips machine, bought in 1982/1983 (I can remember which year exactly). It was "cutted in half", with one half having the tuner part and the other being the magnetoscope itself. My father bought a camera too, which had to be connected to the magnetoscope half part in order to be able to record something. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 217.168.3.246 (talk) 19:49, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
- Me too! THIS is exactly what we had: http://laurent.deschamps.free.fr/v2000/The_V2000_Gallery_fichiers/philips_vr2220.jpg
- True I reckon. V2000 used very fine video tracks to achieve the high density required. If instead, these tracks had used the full tape width then the linear speed could have been halved, and so the same running time arrived at on a single-sided tape. This might have had an unfortunate effect on linear audio quality though. Colin99 15:55, 25 February 2006 (UTC)
- It's important to remember that VCC debuted with 4 hours per side before the VHS E-240 was introduced, although a comparison of blank tapes costs by Which? magazine in March 1981 showed there wasn't much in it hour-for-hour:
Beta VHS VCC tapes available and target prices L125 30min £4.90
L250 1hr 5min £5.50
L370 1hr 30min £6
L500 2hr 15min £6.30
L750 3hr 15min £8.30E30 30min £5
E60 1hr £6.20
E90 1hr 30min £6 [rare]
E120 2hr £7.30
E180 3hr £8.50
E240 4h available shortlyVCC120 2x1hr £7.25
VCC240 2x2hr £11
VCC360 2x3hr £16
VCC480 2x4hr £21.50cost per hour for longest tape £2.55 £2.85 £2.70 cost per hour for 2-hour tape (or nearest) £2.80 £3.65 £3.65
- I've omitted the appropriate columns for VCR and SVR formats for the sake of clarity, and of course this was at a point when Beta was already "losing" and so prices were cheaper than VHS, but nevertheless it does demonstrate that VCC blank tape prices per hour were comparable to VHS. Of course, the £8.50 for an E-180 is the equivalent of around £22 today! Nick Cooper 15:17, 10 December 2006 (UTC)
- I note that the readily available L-830 Beta tape (3 hours and 35 minutes =215 min) is missing from the table. Presumably unavailable in 1981 but must have been shortly thereafter. Colin99 15:55, 2 January 2007 (UTC)
- No, it wasn't included in the table. Presumably it was a follow-on from the development of the E-240, that used a thinner tape than everything upto an E-180. Nick Cooper 19:58, 2 January 2007 (UTC)
- Not so much a developement from the E-240 as a simultaneous development with the E-240 we could assume. The table implies that the E240 is 5h, which must be an error. Colin99 20:29, 2 January 2007 (UTC)
- Yes, my transcription error r.e. "5h" - I've corrected it. Nick Cooper 21:53, 2 January 2007 (UTC)
- Not so much a developement from the E-240 as a simultaneous development with the E-240 we could assume. The table implies that the E240 is 5h, which must be an error. Colin99 20:29, 2 January 2007 (UTC)
- No, it wasn't included in the table. Presumably it was a follow-on from the development of the E-240, that used a thinner tape than everything upto an E-180. Nick Cooper 19:58, 2 January 2007 (UTC)
- I note that the readily available L-830 Beta tape (3 hours and 35 minutes =215 min) is missing from the table. Presumably unavailable in 1981 but must have been shortly thereafter. Colin99 15:55, 2 January 2007 (UTC)
- Just noticed a comment here, that Beta was losing in 1981. Is that so? Losing as in not going to survive? Beta had its best year in 1983 (the top selling UK machine of 1983 of any format was the Sanyo VTC5000). What does the magazine say? Colin99 20:37, 2 January 2007 (UTC)
- Yes, you're right - that was just me prematurely burying the system. The magazine basically says that it's too early to call on either of the three systems, although it notes that prerecorded V2000 tapes are rarer, while the older Philips VCR and Grundig SVR machines could be bought cheaply, but were effectively obsolete. Nick Cooper 21:53, 2 January 2007 (UTC)
- I've omitted the appropriate columns for VCR and SVR formats for the sake of clarity, and of course this was at a point when Beta was already "losing" and so prices were cheaper than VHS, but nevertheless it does demonstrate that VCC blank tape prices per hour were comparable to VHS. Of course, the £8.50 for an E-180 is the equivalent of around £22 today! Nick Cooper 15:17, 10 December 2006 (UTC)
Dimensions
editRegarding this edit; was the original size given in metric or inches? The change might be okay if the metric figure is meant to be an approximate conversion from inches (phoney accuracy in conversions is a bad thing).
OTOH if the original figure (and actual) figure was metric and the inches one is an approximate conversion, then it shouldn't be changed unless it was wrong. And also, the mm should be the main figure given.
Video Tracking
editThe link goes to the wrong page! It should go to the subsection of the VHS page describing what video tracking in the sense of the video head following the track. 67.180.29.122 06:44, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
Non-neutral claim
editI think that the opening sentence in section "Format developments" does not feel really neutral in its claim: "As with so many Philips developments, Video 2000 was ahead of its time."
Shouldn't this be changed?
Mutant_Fred Mutant Fred (talk) 09:26, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
Scanning both fields in still frame mode?
editThe article says:
"Thanks to DTF, V2000 was able to play both fields of the image in still frame mode, providing full vertical resolution whereas VHS and Betamax could only reproduce one field, giving only half of the normal vertical resolution."
Can anyone confirm this? Both VHS and Betamax have always had two video heads on the drum, which scan alternate fields when in still-frame mode, so display both fields. Early VHS machines also displayed the tell-tale "flicker" mentioned in the article. I'm not convinced V2000 was any better/worse than VHS or Betamax in this respect. 86.132.57.137 (talk) 11:06, 27 February 2010 (UTC)
- Well, that was the problem. The heads don't scan correctly down the recorded tracks, because when the tape is stationary, the tracks don't follow the heads. The heads scan across more than one tracks. Ordinarily, the machine would not display a satisfactory stationary picture (bearing in mind that neither head can reproduce the video from the 'wrong' track). As you note: early machines just presented whatever the heads recovered. Various tricks were employed to overcome the deficiency, the main one being to store the last correctly reproduced picture in a frame store and present that to the viewer (more usually only the odd or even field). Also multiple heads were employed and plenty of other tricks besides. With V2000, when the tape was stationary, the DTF mechanism allowed both video heads to move to follow the track on the tape and give a clean picture made up of both fields. 86.182.66.217 (talk) 17:08, 22 May 2010 (UTC)
- I can deny this, actually. My first VHS recorder was a 2 head model. In EP mode it's freeze frame was quite clear, but did jitter when motion existed within the frame. This is not a fault of the deck, but in the nature of any interlaced video. (Even modern digital systems have a version of this called "mouse tooth".) The two fields are recorded separately at different times, so motion will occur. The SOLUTION to this was to add extra video heads to allow only one field to be seen at a time. The loss of sharpness was trivial compared to the benefit of removing the motion jitter. It sounds to me like the article is simply trying to spin another limitation of the Video 2000 format as being a strength - Any two head VCR will behave like this in still mode. Algr (talk) 05:39, 21 July 2015 (UTC)
- You don't need to add extra heads to only scan one field at a time. The solution is simply to discard one of them. And I've had a couple of VHS machines after the V2000 we had at home and it NEVER behave like that, nor I've EVER seen a VHS machine able to show two fields at a time in pause mode. It was useful, too, when viewing film material, with both fields belonging to the same frame. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.151.13.8 (talk) 21:31, 11 November 2015 (UTC)
- Offcourse! What's the use of perfect tracking if you're recording interlaced signal with two completely different fields (unless it's film content with "In-phase" fields and it's usually is not), that content can't be "clean" unless you discard one field. Why was that not corrected in the article? 93.143.32.30 (talk) 02:42, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
Audio dubbing
edit"Hifi sound was never marketed although rumours persisted shortly before the format's demise of a hifi machine which utilised the data track. This would have offered the format another advantage over VHS/Beta as the hifi track would be independent of the visuals, and so could be re-recorded or dubbed as became possible later with Video8" Sorry but we have a "portable" Philips machine from the early eighties and it had a button for "dubbing" audio while keeping the video track intact. You could use whatever was being displayed in its TV tuner, or from the SCART audio pins. I've never seen a domestic VHS machine with that advanced feature. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.151.13.8 (talk) 21:26, 11 November 2015 (UTC)
- Plenty of early VHS machines had audio dub for re-recording the linear audio track, and it was still found on many high-end decks in the 1990s. Most of the latter also had insert edit, which is essentially "video dub" - it overlays new video without disturbing the linear audio (although you could do both together). Nick Cooper (talk) 09:36, 14 April 2016 (UTC)
Marketed in Australia
editVideo 2000 must also been marketed in Australia as well as Europe, South Africa and Argentina, as a PAL market. My brother told me he saw a videorecorder on sale that could record on both sides of a videotape Eligius (talk) 00:33, 18 May 2017 (UTC)
Uncited material in need of citations
editI am moving the following uncited material here until it can be properly supported with inline citations of reliable, secondary sources, per WP:V, WP:NOR, WP:CS, WP:NOR, WP:IRS, WP:PSTS, et al. This diff shows where it was in the article. Nightscream (talk) 20:02, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
Extended content
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Was there a NTSC version?
editWikipedia article is only stating it was PAL. Plus SECAM to an extent. If that is the case then that is technically commercial suicide from a North American and Japanese point of view. Without a NTSC version that was an own goal for the format. Seemed Video 2000 had the best of VHS and Betamax combined. 81.159.28.10 (talk) 20:12, 6 April 2023 (UTC)