Re: VCR's in general
My uncle gave me one of those when he finally realised Beta was a mistake. Still got it, and it still works! Oddly enough I work in a school, and found a VTC5000 under a bench in the staffroom last year....got it going with a bit of TLC so they are reliable machines.
I remember trying to persuade my dad to buy a VCR back in 1979 but he wanted to wait out the format war. By '84 it was clear VHS was the way to go and we got a Ferguson 3V35 from Rumbalows (first and ONLY purchase from them)...very nice machine, front loader with infrared remote...built like a tank and worked for around 10 years. I remember lugging it down the road to a mate's house to copy videos using his dad's Panasonic top loader.
I remember the manager at Rumbalows trying to fob us off with Beta machines, because they just couldn't shift them. But we were set on VHS. Later that day we joined a video library and they had about 3/4 of their shelf space devoted to VHS, vindicating our decision.
As for watching VHS now, in the DVD age...I do so as rarely as possible. From the late 80's onwards I was searching for something better, I got a Laserdisc machine for my 17th birthday (1990) and at least for playing films that was pretty good. The picture and even sound quality of VHS is pretty dire...Betamax was actually better....but it was more expensive, and when people were choosing their first ever video device, price mattered.
Originally posted by Tomo
View Post
I remember trying to persuade my dad to buy a VCR back in 1979 but he wanted to wait out the format war. By '84 it was clear VHS was the way to go and we got a Ferguson 3V35 from Rumbalows (first and ONLY purchase from them)...very nice machine, front loader with infrared remote...built like a tank and worked for around 10 years. I remember lugging it down the road to a mate's house to copy videos using his dad's Panasonic top loader.
I remember the manager at Rumbalows trying to fob us off with Beta machines, because they just couldn't shift them. But we were set on VHS. Later that day we joined a video library and they had about 3/4 of their shelf space devoted to VHS, vindicating our decision.
As for watching VHS now, in the DVD age...I do so as rarely as possible. From the late 80's onwards I was searching for something better, I got a Laserdisc machine for my 17th birthday (1990) and at least for playing films that was pretty good. The picture and even sound quality of VHS is pretty dire...Betamax was actually better....but it was more expensive, and when people were choosing their first ever video device, price mattered.
Comment