Hi all,
Are VHS players affected by shock, movement or shaking? Say you drop something heavy on the table while recording will it affect the playback for the recording? Kind of like how portable CD players used to skip a long time ago is it the same for VHS?
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 7 of 7
-
-
Google says there is a video drum that spins 1500rpm, but nobody knows how it works. Oh well, I have been recording for 15 hours, I’ll finish off recording my remaining 5 videos each 3 hours long probably. Doesn’t matter how it turns out as long as the tapes are backed up in case the world ends because of COVID-19. When I order my TBC via international shipping from the USA I’ll move everything to a seperate room and record there.
-
Yes.
Say you drop something heavy on the table while recording will it affect the playback for the recording? Kind of like how portable CD players used to skip a long time ago is it the same for VHS?
I sometimes used to non-scope realign decks in my lap. The smallest movement, or even an incline, caused some drift.Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
I have the opposite opinion, based on actual use, and the answer is probably no.
My first VCR, in 1981, was a Quasar two-part unit. It was in two parts, with the tuner in one box and the recording mechanism in the other, because it was designed to be used with a video camera. For eight years I strapped that VCR over my shoulder and while walking would take video of the family. I would often take it off my shoulder and plunk it down on a table while filming. I did lots of other mechanically stressful things as well.
I never got any glitches in the video or audio.
This was based on actual use, not theory.
I am sure that a violent enough blow would eventually feed into the mechanics and cause some sort of disruption, but simply dropping something on the table (not on the unit), and then having that vibration transmitted by the table into the VCR almost certainly will not cause any problem.
And, of course, every tape-based camcorder had similar mechanisms, including the original one-piece camcorders (which I got in 1989 to replace my 1981 units). These used nearly-full-sized mechanisms, so they should have been subject to the same mechanical problems. We would have heard hundreds of stories and seen thousands of glitched videos if there was a problem with simple mechanical bumps. -
Similar Threads
-
D-VHS Recording in 2018
By dellsam34 in forum Software PlayingReplies: 8Last Post: 10th May 2019, 15:03 -
Software setup that does loop recording / continuous recording.
By ruant in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 0Last Post: 16th Oct 2018, 06:41 -
VHS to DVD Recording
By joe645 in forum Capturing and VCRReplies: 19Last Post: 26th Jun 2018, 20:51 -
Recording from pc to vhs
By Emilie1990 in forum Capturing and VCRReplies: 6Last Post: 7th Aug 2017, 14:16 -
Honestech VHS to DVD 2.0 - Software not recording although VHS is playing
By emma1994 in forum Capturing and VCRReplies: 1Last Post: 24th Nov 2016, 18:11