Video Tape to DVD Conversion London, UK from just £20.00
VHS TO DVD TRANSFER provides a professional Video Tape to DVD transfer or conversion
service.
VHS TO DVD TRANSFER is the authority in the UK when it comes to Video Tape to DVD
conversion or Transfer. We use state-of-the-art equipment to make sure the job
is done to the highest technical specification resulting in the best quality
DVD that can be created from the original tape source. VHS TO DVD TRANSFER is based in
London, UK.
This service includes
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Digital re-mastering of your Video Tape
Tape
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Audio level balancing and enhancement
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Picture enhancement
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Audio converted to Dolby Stereo
The resulting video streams are authored and burned to DVD
. We can get as much as four hours on a single DVD with most customers
remarking that the resulting video is clearer, sharper and sounds better!
Don’t let your Video Tape
memories fade away, preserve them with VHS TO DVD TRANSFER!
Trust VHS TO DVD TRANSFER to preserve your memories and make sure you know what you are
buying! There are many tape to dvd conversion companies who simply plug your
precious memories into low quality DVD recorders and send you the result. This
is the inferior way to preserve your memories as no digital corrections can be
made to the video or the audio. For more information see the
benefits of using VHS TO DVD TRANSFER.
History of Video Tape
Before the advent of the VCR proper, portable video recorders using 13 mm
(half-inch) wide tape on 18 cm (7 inch aprox.) reels were marketed by both Sony
and Philips. These did not have timers, and were mainly used by schools and
colleges to record educational programmes, and by businesses as a means of
distributing training films. Even earlier, in the 1950s, British enthusiasts
could buy home kinescope kits which allowed the filming of TV shows on 16mm
film.
In 1958, Ampex took its color video tape recorder to Russia and demonstrated it
before Vice President Richard Nixon and Nikita Khrushchev, Premier of the USSR.
A color video recording was brought back to the US and seen on American
television. RCA also had taken color television equipment and cameras to the
USSR.
In the early 1970s the Dutch electronics company Philips developed a VCR system
that used square cassettes with a recording time of one hour (the Video Compact
Cassette system). The machines were equipped with crude timers that used rotary
dials. The machines were expensive and the system never caught on.
It was not until the late 1970s, when European and Japanese companies developed
more technically advanced machines with more accurate electronic timers and
greater tape duration, that the VCR started to become a mass market consumer
product. By 1980 there were three competing technical standards, with
different, physically incompatible tape cassettes.
One, the Video 2000 or V2000 system, also from Philips dropped out of the
running quite quickly. It worked well, and gave a good quality recording and
playback, as it used piezoelectric head positioning to dynamically adjust the
tape tracking. It was also notable in that its cassettes had two sides, like a
record or audio cassette. However, V2000 hit the market after the other two
rivals, and managed only limited sales in Europe before vanishing.
The two major standards were Sony's Betamax (also known as Betacord or just
Beta), and JVC's VHS. Betamax was generally reckoned to make and play slightly
better quality recordings and used smaller media, but VHS rapidly overtook it
in sales.
As more VHS recorders came into use, and more VHS films became available,
network effects eventually squeezed Betamax out of the consumer market; though
a related system called Betacam still remains in use for high quality
professional recording equipment.
Various reasons are given for the failure of the Beta consumer format:
Some accounts claim that VHS won because initially allowed for twice the
recording time Others attribute the success of VHS to the greater availability
of pornography on that medium, reflecting the long standing tradition of
pornography being the driving force for the takeup of new media (the Internet
being another obvious example).
JVC and Sony used different marketing models for their technology: JVC licensed
their VHS technology to consumer electronics companies like Zenith and RCA,
which then produced low-cost VCRs, enriching JVC through royalties paid under
its license. Sony did not license the Beta format to other manufacturers; Sony
was the only company to produce Beta machines, and Sony was unable to compete
on price with the somewhat inferior-quality VHS standard.
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, DVD gradually overtook the VCR as the most
popular format for playback of prerecorded video.
For home video recording, both Personal Video Recorders (such as Tivo and
ReplayTV) and DVD recorders are becoming popular, although neither has yet
supplanted the VCR. In fact, Tivo cooperates well with VCRs which can be used
to archive PVR recordings. However, the introduction of recordable DVDs with
sufficient recording capacity on to the regular market with their advantage of
random access could spell the doom of the VCR once the price comes down
significantly.
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