Video 2000
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- Note: This article is about the format sometimes known as 'VCC' or 'Video Compact Cassette'. It should not be confused with Philips' earlier (and incompatible) videocassette format called 'VCR' or 'Video Cassette Recording'.
Philips originally named the videotape standard Video Compact Cassette (VCC) to complement their landmark Audio Compact Cassette format introduced in 1963. However, both names proved unpopular, and Philips chiefly marketed the system under the trademark Video 2000. VCC/V2000 succeeded Philips' earlier VCR, VCR-LP and Grundig's SVR formats.
Technological innovations
Video 2000 offered several innovative features unmatched by the competing standards, VHS and Betamax:
- All Video Compact Cassettes store video and audio on one side of the tape. The V2000 scans half the tape, and by flipping the tape it scans the other half of the tape, thus doubling playing time.
- Because of its Dynamic Track Following (DTF) technology (involving an advanced, movable video head tip), V2000 did not require video tracking control. Note that a few V2000 models lacked DTF.
- All V2000 VCRs sported an auto-rewind function (later matched by VHS and Betamax)
- Superior dynamic noise ("tape hiss") reduction
- Inclusion of a data track alongside the video track
Not long before the end of Video 2000 production, Philips introduced a long-play cassette, the V2000 XL, with a capacity of eight hours per side. Philips also created a prototype of a more compact V2000 cassette (analogous to VHS-C) that was playable in existing units using a full-sized cassette adaptor, but Philips retired Video 2000 before the development was ready for market.
Though linear stereo sound was available on some models, Hifi sound was never marketed. Both VHS and Betamax offered HiFi stereo sound with near-CD sound quality by the mid 1980s.
Construction of the Video Compact Cassette
Despite their name, VCCs were even larger than VHS cassettes, about just as wide, but a bit taller. They had two reels, containing half-inch (12.5mm) wide chrome dioxide magnetic tape; the format utilized only a quarter-inch (6.24 mm) of the half-inch tape on a given side, and so you will occasionally see this referred to as a quarter-inch tape format despite using half-inch tape.VHS tapes allow the user to break off a tab on the cassette so that recordings cannot be wiped. Once the tab has been broken then the tape cannot be erased. But VCC's were more flexible, instead of a tab VCC's had a switch so that the user could decide how long a recoding should be kept for.
Video 2000 and the videocassette format war
Philips released the first Video 2000 VCR, the VR2000, in 1979. Several other models distributed by Philips, Grundig and Bang & Olufsen followed, but manufacturing ceased in 1988. Video 2000 eventually lost the videotape format war, and Betamax followed soon after.V2000's failure may be partially attributable to its late entrance to market (slowed by problems in the development of the DTF system). Also, although it was technologically superior to the competition in several ways, it could not compete with VHS and Betamax's key advantages:
- VHS and Betamax already had established market share and ample prerecorded video libraries
- VHS and Betamax sported slightly better display resolution
- VHS and Betamax VCRs were reputedly more reliable.
- Betamax camcorders arrived at market first
- VHS and Betamax enjoyed international distribution
By the latter half of the 1980s, Philips had already begun producing their own VHS-compatible VCRs.
External links
- [Mikey's Vintage VTR Page - Video 2000]
- [Video 2000 page at Total Rewind - The Virtual Museum of Vintage VCRs]
- [V2000 PALsite] - Information about the V2000 video format
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