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Betamovie

Betamovie is the brand name for a range of consumer grade camcorders developed by Sony for the Betamax format. By "camcorder" is understood a single unit comprising a video camera and a video recorder.

Betamovie
Sony Betamovie BMC-100P
IntroducedMay 1983[1]
EncodingNTSC, PAL
Recording mediaBetamax cassette
Recording time on L-830 cassette:
PALUp to 216 min.
NTSCBI: Up to 100 min.
BII: Up to 200 min.
BIII: Up to 300 min.
Write mechanismSingle head Helical scan
PlaybackNot available
Intended usageHome movies
MarketConsumer/Amateur
Developed bySony

Betamovie records analog video on a standard Betamax cassette.

A range of models was manufactured for the PAL and NTSC formats. The first model, BMC-100P (PAL) and BMC-110 (NTSC) was released in 1983 making it the first commercial consumer grade camcorder.[2] While only standard beta units were available in PAL, several SuperBeta models were produced for the NTSC format.

Due to constructional limitations, the Betamovie has no playback function.[3] It is only capable of recording. This limitation, along with the decline of the Betamax format in the late 1980s, caused Sony to abandon the Betamovie line just a few years after its initial release in favor of its newly developed Video8 format.

History edit

As far back as the 1960s, cameras were available for the reel-to-reel portable VTRs of that time. These cameras were similar in size and weight to the cine-cameras of the day. They generally used a single video camera tube. However, these systems were not in common use by ordinary consumers.

After the introduction of VHS and Betamax formats in the mid-1970s, videocassette recorders (VCR) started gaining mass market traction—by 1982, 10% of UK households owned a VCR.[4] The first two-piece camera/VCR systems emerged in around 1980. These units included a portable VCR, which the user would carry on a shoulder strap, and a separate camera, which was connected to the VCR by a special cable. These systems were cumbersome and heavy. For example, the portable Sony SL-3000 VCR from 1980 weighed around 9 kg without the battery.[5] The accompanying camera (e.g. HVC-2000P) would weigh around 3 kg[6] Thus, the complete setup could easily weigh in excess of 13 kg.

In order to be more appealing to the typical consumer wanting a practical device for recording home movies, a more compact and preferably one-piece device was needed. The first such device, the Betamovie BMC-100/110, was released in 1983 by Sony. Although the term was not in common use at that time, such a device would later become known as a camcorder, a single unit comprising a video camera and a video recorder. The BMC-100/110 weighed just 2.5 kg and was a much less cumbersome solution than its predecessors. The whole device could be supported on a user's shoulder. In order to achieve such weight and size reductions, several key components had to be miniaturized. One major requirement for a one-piece camcorder was miniaturizing the recording head drum. Sony's solution to this involved recording a non-standard video signal which would become standard only when played back on full-sized VCRs.[3] A side effect of this was that Betamovie camcorders were record-only.[3] As instant playback is one of the main advantages of video cameras over cine-cameras, lack of a playback function presented a considerable limitation[2] and effectively limited Betamovie to those who already owned the Betamax VCRs required to view their recordings.[3]

In 1984, JVC presented its own version of a camcorder, the GR-C1, for the VHS format. Although it too had a miniature head drum, the JVC engineers developed a different solution to drum miniaturization, which made it possible to record a standard video signal on the tape, so the user of a VHS camcorder could review footage on location and copy it to another VCR for editing. Sony was unable to duplicate this functionality, and this Betamovie failing so was a primary reason for its early loss of market share.

Despite this development, Sony held on to the Betamovie for a couple of years more, releasing some more advanced models, especially for the NTSC market. However, in 1987, Sony finally abandoned the Betamovie in favor of its newly developed Video8 format.

Technical overview edit

 
Head drum and lacing mechanism of BMC-100P.

Betamovie uses a standard-size Betamax cassette, and the recordings produced are in standard Betamax format, suitable for playback on a standard Beta deck.

However, in order to achieve the necessary miniaturisation, a non-standard recording method and head design are used. As a result of this, Betamovie camcorders themselves are record-only and do not support playback of recordings.

Non-standard recording method edit

Unlike in Betamax VCRs, the tape is wrapped 300° around a miniaturised head drum[3] nearly 45 mm in diameter with a single dual-azimuth head to write the video tracks, using a special tape transport reminiscent of that of VHS (in that the tape is wrapped around the head drum in a similar manner, but with a more extreme wrap). Compared to the normal Betamax head drum of 75 mm, the Betamovie head drum spins at 2500 rpm rather than 1500 rpm. The fields on the tape are written at 120% (i.e. six-fifths) the normal speed.

Due to the use of a single-head drum combined with the not-quite-complete 300° (five-sixths) wrap, the head is out of contact with the tape and unable to record around one-sixth of the time. This means that the complete signal must be (in effect) slightly "time compressed"[3] to "fit in" to the period during which the tape is still in contact with the head.

Betamovie achieves this by making the tape-to-head speed slightly higher than normal (20% faster[3] or six-fifths the usual speed) and "overscanning" the camera tube- i.e. reading more lines than necessary[3] at the periphery. Effectively, the higher speed means that the head can traverse the full tape sweep in five-sixths of the usual time, and covers the gap during the remainder.[3]

The timing- and number of extra scan lines- are arranged such that the lines "lost" (due to being output during the unrecordable "gap" period) are the unwanted "overscan" lines. This means that the full complement of "regular" lines (525 for NTSC) will have been scanned and recorded successfully during the period that the head was in contact with the tape.[3]

The result- by design- is a recording that is in standard Betamax format, and which appears normal when played back at normal speed on a standard Betamax VCR.[3] However, due to the non-standard timing and head design, Betamovie camcorders themselves are record-only, and in-camcorder playback (including preview and dubbing) is not possible.[3]

Other aspects edit

The early models have an optical viewfinder, which lets one see exactly what one is recording by looking directly through the lens, via a system of mirrors and prisms - similar to an SLR stills camera.[2] Some later models feature an electronic viewfinder, although they remain record-only[7] without the through-viewfinder playback supported by some non-Betamovie camcorders.

Early models use a cathode ray tube as their image sensor and the BMC-100/110 has manual focus. Later models use CCD image sensors instead and feature autofocus.[8]

All Betamovies for the PAL format record in standard Betamax video mode. Some of the models for the NTSC format can record in the enhanced SuperBeta mode or even the Super Hi-Band Beta mode.[7]

Models edit

BMC-100P and BMC-110 edit

 
BMC-100P in carrying case.

Released in May 1983. The first model and the world's first consumer grade camcorder.[2] BMC-100P is the PAL model and BMC-110 is the NTSC model.

The camera uses a SMF Trinicon tube as its image sensor. It features 6X power zoom, manual focus, and an optical viewfinder. It requires 35 Lux to operate. The BMC-110 only records in BII.

BMC-200P and BMC-220 edit

This camera features auto-focus. Apart from this, it is identical to the first model.

BMC-500 and BMC-550 edit

 
Sony BMC-500.

Released in 1985. A substantial redesign. This camera uses a CCD sensor and features time and date settings. BMC-500 is the last PAL Betamovie.

GSC-1 edit

Released in 1985. NTSC model. This is an industrial/professional camcorder. It is similar to BMC-660. However, like BMC-1000, it features an electronic viewfinder.

BMC-660 edit

Released in 1986. NTSC model. This camera records in SuperBeta mode, BII only.

BMC-1000 edit

Released in 1987. NTSC model. An upgraded model. Features an electronic viewfinder and records in SuperBeta BI and Super Hi-Band Beta BI. It is still a record-only unit.

EDC-55 ED-Beta camcorder edit

EDC-55 became the final and most advanced iteration of camcorders for the Betamax format. It is a semiprofessional/prosumer device that only records in the ED-Beta format, the final high-definition variant of the Betamax format. This camera produces over 550 lines of resolution, records in Hi-Fi stereo and features insert audio and video editing. Unlike the Betamovie camcorders, it can play back its own recordings. It was only released for the NTSC format.[7]

Accessories edit

AC Adapter/battery charger (AC-M100, AC-M110, BC-300) edit

 
AC Adapter AC-M100E.

The AC-M100/110 is a combined AC Adapter and charger for a single NP-11 rechargeable battery. The output voltage to the camera is 9,6 V, 1 A. The battery is charged with 14 V, 1,2 A.

The principal difference between the M100 and M110 appears to be that the M100 can run on 110 - 240 V AC while the M110 can run on 100 - 240 V AC.

The BC-300 can charge three NP-11 batteries simultaneously.

Rechargeable battery (NP-11) edit

 
NP-11 battery.

A Ni-Cad battery providing approximately one hour of continuous operation.

Carrying case (LC-710, LC-720, LC-760, LC-770) edit

 
LC-720 carrying case.

A hard shell carrying case.

LC-710 and LC-720 are designed for the BMC-100/110/200/220. The larger LC-710 can hold the camcorder, two NP-11 batteries and an AC-M100/110 adapter. The smaller LC-720 has no room for an AC-power adapter.

LC-760 is for the BMC-500/550/660. It can hold the camcorder, two NP-11 batteries and a BC-300 adapter.

LC-770 is for the GCS-1 and BMC-1000. It can hold the camcorder, two NP-11 batteries and a BC-300 adapter.

Jacket (LC-810, LC-850) edit

LC-810 is a flexible jacket for protecting the body of a BMC-100/110/200/220.

LC-850 is for BMC-500/550/660.

External microphone shoe (SAD-100) edit

An externally mounted boom microphone shoe.

External microphone (ECM-K100, ECM-Z300) edit

ECM-K100 is a supercardioid microphone which picks up a specific sound source while cutting out extraneous surrounding noise. It requires a single size AA battery

ECM-Z300 is a zoom microphone which picks up sound from a large area to a more restricted frontal area. It requires a single 9V battery.

Remote control (RM-81) edit

A wired remote control with a Record/Pause button.

Car adapter (DCC-2600) edit

A car adapter with cable for connecting to the cigarette lighter socket in a car.

Battery belt (BP-400) edit

A battery belt worn around the waist which provides approximately 4 hours of operating time.

Cassette rewinder/eraser (BE-V50) edit

Used to quickly rewind or erase any Beta cassette tape.

Tripod (VCT-150K) edit

Heavy duty tripod with smooth panning and tilting. Supplied with carrying bag.

Video head cleaning cassette (L-25CL) edit

Cassette used to clean the video heads.

See also edit

  • VHS-C – competing camcorder tape format
  • Handycam – Sony's succesor to the Betamovie
  • Video8 – successor videocassette format to Betamax for camcorders

References edit

  1. ^ Wielage & Woodcock 2003
  2. ^ a b c d "Total Rewind". www.totalrewind.org. Retrieved 2018-04-04.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Alec Connectify ("Technology Connections") (2018-07-03). "Betamovie: Sony's Terrible (But Ingenious) Camcorder". YouTube. Retrieved 2021-05-16. [04:36] [Design meant] [head] drum could be much smaller, and the tape transport could be [shrunk] [but problem is] although the tape is wrapped most of the way around the drum, there is still a gap. The head can't possibly make a seamless video signal
    [06:38] Actual distance the head travels along the tape with each sweep is the same as a normal VCR. It will line up perfectly with the head surface once it's inside a full size Beta VCR [..] But that gap means that the head is travelling a longer distance with each rotation [thus] the head itself travels the distance with a tape-to-head speed that's about 20% too fast
    [07:32]
    [Solution to gap is] sampling the picture tube at 625 lines, the gap from the Betamovie head will routinely throw out 100 [leaving] the 525 you need [thus] head's higher speed when recording becomes cancelled out. [Image isn't lost since extra overscan lines] are pretty much just black.
    [08:23] [Betamovie's design means that] the gap is only there when recording [and] when the tape is played back on a normal VCR, there are no gaps at all.
    [08:42] because the tape-to-head speed is a little bit slower in the VCR, that 18.8 kHz [recorded signal] automatically [becomes a standard] 15.7 kHz signal [on playback]
    [09:08] This video trickery enabled the Betamovie to be remarkably small for its time, while producing recordings that were compatible with your favorite Beta VCR [however it also meant that] Betamovie cannot play back its own recordings
    [15:36] the only people who could use a Betamovie were the same people who already had a Betamax VCR. This camera is of literally no use [otherwise]
  4. ^ "Thatcher years in graphics". 2005-11-18. Retrieved 2018-04-06.
  5. ^ "Betamax PALsite: SL-3000 : Specifications". www.palsite.com. Retrieved 2018-04-06.
  6. ^ Wagner, Stephan. "Die Wagners Stephans Projekte". www.sps-wagner.de. Retrieved 2018-04-06.
  7. ^ a b c "The Betamovies Page!". www.betainfoguide.net. Retrieved 2018-04-06.
  8. ^ "Total Rewind". www.totalrewind.org. Retrieved 2018-04-06.

External links edit

  • Betamovie: Sony's Terrible (But Ingenious) Camcorder - Includes an in-depth explanation of how Betamovie's non-standard recording technique works

betamovie, this, article, about, betamax, based, consumer, camcorder, line, confused, with, related, incompatible, professional, camcorder, format, betacam, brand, name, range, consumer, grade, camcorders, developed, sony, betamax, format, camcorder, understoo. This article is about the Betamax based consumer camcorder line It is not to be confused with the related but incompatible professional camcorder format Betacam Betamovie is the brand name for a range of consumer grade camcorders developed by Sony for the Betamax format By camcorder is understood a single unit comprising a video camera and a video recorder BetamovieSony Betamovie BMC 100PIntroducedMay 1983 1 EncodingNTSC PALRecording mediaBetamax cassetteRecording time on L 830 cassette PALUp to 216 min NTSCBI Up to 100 min BII Up to 200 min BIII Up to 300 min Write mechanismSingle head Helical scanPlaybackNot availableIntended usageHome moviesMarketConsumer AmateurDeveloped bySony Betamovie records analog video on a standard Betamax cassette A range of models was manufactured for the PAL and NTSC formats The first model BMC 100P PAL and BMC 110 NTSC was released in 1983 making it the first commercial consumer grade camcorder 2 While only standard beta units were available in PAL several SuperBeta models were produced for the NTSC format Due to constructional limitations the Betamovie has no playback function 3 It is only capable of recording This limitation along with the decline of the Betamax format in the late 1980s caused Sony to abandon the Betamovie line just a few years after its initial release in favor of its newly developed Video8 format Contents 1 History 2 Technical overview 2 1 Non standard recording method 2 2 Other aspects 3 Models 3 1 BMC 100P and BMC 110 3 2 BMC 200P and BMC 220 3 3 BMC 500 and BMC 550 3 4 GSC 1 3 5 BMC 660 3 6 BMC 1000 4 EDC 55 ED Beta camcorder 5 Accessories 5 1 AC Adapter battery charger AC M100 AC M110 BC 300 5 2 Rechargeable battery NP 11 5 3 Carrying case LC 710 LC 720 LC 760 LC 770 5 4 Jacket LC 810 LC 850 5 5 External microphone shoe SAD 100 5 6 External microphone ECM K100 ECM Z300 5 7 Remote control RM 81 5 8 Car adapter DCC 2600 5 9 Battery belt BP 400 5 10 Cassette rewinder eraser BE V50 5 11 Tripod VCT 150K 5 12 Video head cleaning cassette L 25CL 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editAs far back as the 1960s cameras were available for the reel to reel portable VTRs of that time These cameras were similar in size and weight to the cine cameras of the day They generally used a single video camera tube However these systems were not in common use by ordinary consumers After the introduction of VHS and Betamax formats in the mid 1970s videocassette recorders VCR started gaining mass market traction by 1982 10 of UK households owned a VCR 4 The first two piece camera VCR systems emerged in around 1980 These units included a portable VCR which the user would carry on a shoulder strap and a separate camera which was connected to the VCR by a special cable These systems were cumbersome and heavy For example the portable Sony SL 3000 VCR from 1980 weighed around 9 kg without the battery 5 The accompanying camera e g HVC 2000P would weigh around 3 kg 6 Thus the complete setup could easily weigh in excess of 13 kg In order to be more appealing to the typical consumer wanting a practical device for recording home movies a more compact and preferably one piece device was needed The first such device the Betamovie BMC 100 110 was released in 1983 by Sony Although the term was not in common use at that time such a device would later become known as a camcorder a single unit comprising a video camera and a video recorder The BMC 100 110 weighed just 2 5 kg and was a much less cumbersome solution than its predecessors The whole device could be supported on a user s shoulder In order to achieve such weight and size reductions several key components had to be miniaturized One major requirement for a one piece camcorder was miniaturizing the recording head drum Sony s solution to this involved recording a non standard video signal which would become standard only when played back on full sized VCRs 3 A side effect of this was that Betamovie camcorders were record only 3 As instant playback is one of the main advantages of video cameras over cine cameras lack of a playback function presented a considerable limitation 2 and effectively limited Betamovie to those who already owned the Betamax VCRs required to view their recordings 3 In 1984 JVC presented its own version of a camcorder the GR C1 for the VHS format Although it too had a miniature head drum the JVC engineers developed a different solution to drum miniaturization which made it possible to record a standard video signal on the tape so the user of a VHS camcorder could review footage on location and copy it to another VCR for editing Sony was unable to duplicate this functionality and this Betamovie failing so was a primary reason for its early loss of market share Despite this development Sony held on to the Betamovie for a couple of years more releasing some more advanced models especially for the NTSC market However in 1987 Sony finally abandoned the Betamovie in favor of its newly developed Video8 format Technical overview edit nbsp Head drum and lacing mechanism of BMC 100P Betamovie uses a standard size Betamax cassette and the recordings produced are in standard Betamax format suitable for playback on a standard Beta deck However in order to achieve the necessary miniaturisation a non standard recording method and head design are used As a result of this Betamovie camcorders themselves are record only and do not support playback of recordings Non standard recording method edit Unlike in Betamax VCRs the tape is wrapped 300 around a miniaturised head drum 3 nearly 45 mm in diameter with a single dual azimuth head to write the video tracks using a special tape transport reminiscent of that of VHS in that the tape is wrapped around the head drum in a similar manner but with a more extreme wrap Compared to the normal Betamax head drum of 75 mm the Betamovie head drum spins at 2500 rpm rather than 1500 rpm The fields on the tape are written at 120 i e six fifths the normal speed Due to the use of a single head drum combined with the not quite complete 300 five sixths wrap the head is out of contact with the tape and unable to record around one sixth of the time This means that the complete signal must be in effect slightly time compressed 3 to fit in to the period during which the tape is still in contact with the head Betamovie achieves this by making the tape to head speed slightly higher than normal 20 faster 3 or six fifths the usual speed and overscanning the camera tube i e reading more lines than necessary 3 at the periphery Effectively the higher speed means that the head can traverse the full tape sweep in five sixths of the usual time and covers the gap during the remainder 3 The timing and number of extra scan lines are arranged such that the lines lost due to being output during the unrecordable gap period are the unwanted overscan lines This means that the full complement of regular lines 525 for NTSC will have been scanned and recorded successfully during the period that the head was in contact with the tape 3 The result by design is a recording that is in standard Betamax format and which appears normal when played back at normal speed on a standard Betamax VCR 3 However due to the non standard timing and head design Betamovie camcorders themselves are record only and in camcorder playback including preview and dubbing is not possible 3 Other aspects edit The early models have an optical viewfinder which lets one see exactly what one is recording by looking directly through the lens via a system of mirrors and prisms similar to an SLR stills camera 2 Some later models feature an electronic viewfinder although they remain record only 7 without the through viewfinder playback supported by some non Betamovie camcorders Early models use a cathode ray tube as their image sensor and the BMC 100 110 has manual focus Later models use CCD image sensors instead and feature autofocus 8 All Betamovies for the PAL format record in standard Betamax video mode Some of the models for the NTSC format can record in the enhanced SuperBeta mode or even the Super Hi Band Beta mode 7 Models editBMC 100P and BMC 110 edit nbsp BMC 100P in carrying case Released in May 1983 The first model and the world s first consumer grade camcorder 2 BMC 100P is the PAL model and BMC 110 is the NTSC model The camera uses a SMF Trinicon tube as its image sensor It features 6X power zoom manual focus and an optical viewfinder It requires 35 Lux to operate The BMC 110 only records in BII BMC 200P and BMC 220 edit This camera features auto focus Apart from this it is identical to the first model BMC 500 and BMC 550 edit nbsp Sony BMC 500 Released in 1985 A substantial redesign This camera uses a CCD sensor and features time and date settings BMC 500 is the last PAL Betamovie GSC 1 edit Released in 1985 NTSC model This is an industrial professional camcorder It is similar to BMC 660 However like BMC 1000 it features an electronic viewfinder BMC 660 edit Released in 1986 NTSC model This camera records in SuperBeta mode BII only BMC 1000 edit Released in 1987 NTSC model An upgraded model Features an electronic viewfinder and records in SuperBeta BI and Super Hi Band Beta BI It is still a record only unit EDC 55 ED Beta camcorder editEDC 55 became the final and most advanced iteration of camcorders for the Betamax format It is a semiprofessional prosumer device that only records in the ED Beta format the final high definition variant of the Betamax format This camera produces over 550 lines of resolution records in Hi Fi stereo and features insert audio and video editing Unlike the Betamovie camcorders it can play back its own recordings It was only released for the NTSC format 7 Accessories editAC Adapter battery charger AC M100 AC M110 BC 300 edit nbsp AC Adapter AC M100E The AC M100 110 is a combined AC Adapter and charger for a single NP 11 rechargeable battery The output voltage to the camera is 9 6 V 1 A The battery is charged with 14 V 1 2 A The principal difference between the M100 and M110 appears to be that the M100 can run on 110 240 V AC while the M110 can run on 100 240 V AC The BC 300 can charge three NP 11 batteries simultaneously Rechargeable battery NP 11 edit nbsp NP 11 battery A Ni Cad battery providing approximately one hour of continuous operation Carrying case LC 710 LC 720 LC 760 LC 770 edit nbsp LC 720 carrying case A hard shell carrying case LC 710 and LC 720 are designed for the BMC 100 110 200 220 The larger LC 710 can hold the camcorder two NP 11 batteries and an AC M100 110 adapter The smaller LC 720 has no room for an AC power adapter LC 760 is for the BMC 500 550 660 It can hold the camcorder two NP 11 batteries and a BC 300 adapter LC 770 is for the GCS 1 and BMC 1000 It can hold the camcorder two NP 11 batteries and a BC 300 adapter Jacket LC 810 LC 850 edit LC 810 is a flexible jacket for protecting the body of a BMC 100 110 200 220 LC 850 is for BMC 500 550 660 External microphone shoe SAD 100 edit An externally mounted boom microphone shoe External microphone ECM K100 ECM Z300 edit ECM K100 is a supercardioid microphone which picks up a specific sound source while cutting out extraneous surrounding noise It requires a single size AA batteryECM Z300 is a zoom microphone which picks up sound from a large area to a more restricted frontal area It requires a single 9V battery Remote control RM 81 edit A wired remote control with a Record Pause button Car adapter DCC 2600 edit A car adapter with cable for connecting to the cigarette lighter socket in a car Battery belt BP 400 edit A battery belt worn around the waist which provides approximately 4 hours of operating time Cassette rewinder eraser BE V50 edit Used to quickly rewind or erase any Beta cassette tape Tripod VCT 150K edit Heavy duty tripod with smooth panning and tilting Supplied with carrying bag Video head cleaning cassette L 25CL edit Cassette used to clean the video heads See also editVHS C competing camcorder tape format Handycam Sony s succesor to the Betamovie Video8 successor videocassette format to Betamax for camcordersReferences edit Wielage amp Woodcock 2003 a b c d Total Rewind www totalrewind org Retrieved 2018 04 04 a b c d e f g h i j k l Alec Connectify Technology Connections 2018 07 03 Betamovie Sony s Terrible But Ingenious Camcorder YouTube Retrieved 2021 05 16 04 36 Design meant head drum could be much smaller and the tape transport could be shrunk but problem is although the tape is wrapped most of the way around the drum there is still a gap The head can t possibly make a seamless video signal 06 38 Actual distance the head travels along the tape with each sweep is the same as a normal VCR It will line up perfectly with the head surface once it s inside a full size Beta VCR But that gap means that the head is travelling a longer distance with each rotation thus the head itself travels the distance with a tape to head speed that s about 20 too fast 07 32 Solution to gap is sampling the picture tube at 625 lines the gap from the Betamovie head will routinely throw out 100 leaving the 525 you need thus head s higher speed when recording becomes cancelled out Image isn t lost since extra overscan lines are pretty much just black 08 23 Betamovie s design means that the gap is only there when recording and when the tape is played back on a normal VCR there are no gaps at all 08 42 because the tape to head speed is a little bit slower in the VCR that 18 8 kHz recorded signal automatically becomes a standard 15 7 kHz signal on playback 09 08 This video trickery enabled the Betamovie to be remarkably small for its time while producing recordings that were compatible with your favorite Beta VCR however it also meant that Betamovie cannot play back its own recordings 15 36 the only people who could use a Betamovie were the same people who already had a Betamax VCR This camera is of literally no use otherwise Thatcher years in graphics 2005 11 18 Retrieved 2018 04 06 Betamax PALsite SL 3000 Specifications www palsite com Retrieved 2018 04 06 Wagner Stephan Die Wagners Stephans Projekte www sps wagner de Retrieved 2018 04 06 a b c The Betamovies Page www betainfoguide net Retrieved 2018 04 06 Total Rewind www totalrewind org Retrieved 2018 04 06 External links editBetamovie Sony s Terrible But Ingenious Camcorder Includes an in depth explanation of how Betamovie s non standard recording technique works Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Betamovie amp oldid 1223296527, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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