olivier@butler.UUCP (Charles Olivier) (10/01/85)
I'm looking for a VCR that has more that 230 lines of horizontal resolution (like 260 & above & VHS perferable and 1/2 inch tape). Any suggestions? Any info would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance Charles Olivier P.O. Box 2249 Kirkland Wa 98083 uucp: ...uw-beaver!{tikal,teltone}!dataio!butler!olivier & Email
brown@nicmad.UUCP (10/04/85)
In article <145@butler.UUCP> olivier@butler.UUCP (Charles Olivier) writes: >I'm looking for a VCR that has more that 230 lines of >horizontal resolution (like 260 & above & VHS perferable >and 1/2 inch tape). Any suggestions? You will have to keep looking, as the beast doesn't exist. SuperBeta is supposed to come close to 260. For higher resolution, I use 3/4" Umatic. -- Mr. Video {seismo!uwvax!|!decvax|!ihnp4}!nicmad!brown
dsi@unccvax.UUCP (Dataspan Inc) (10/07/85)
There are several manufacturers of YIQ-type Beta and VHS vcr's, with luminance response to (supposedly) 4.2 mHz. This is sufficient for full NTSC video performance ( ~~ 370 TVL with Kell factor of 0.707). These recorders, while they use the Beta and VHS tape, are not compatible with home recorders. They are "high band" equipment. Also, you see people who specialize in taking U-Matic recorders and jacking them up to 11.5 mHz and a modulation index of 1. These are claimed to be direct colour rather than colour under (the primary source of scuzz in your VTR image). If you want a consumer recorder to do this, forget it. There is nothing quite like all the comb filtering and overshoot "enhancement" used in this junk, and MTF numbers are meaningless in a consumer VTR due to the signal processing. For highest bandwidth, I use a Sony BVH-2500 and throw out the tie base corrector's filters. If you need even more bandwidth, buy a Super Slo-Mo machine from Sony and modify it (it goes to at least 15 mHz). David Anthony C.D.E. DataSpan, Inc .