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VIDEOTAPE FORMATS

This is a list of more than 60 videotape formats dating back to 1956. Some of these formats were suggestions made by some of my visitors. If you know of a videotape format I could add to this list, email me at info@duplicationmedia.com with as much information about the format that you can possibly gather.

FORMATS USING 2" TAPE
DEVELOPER
YEAR
INFORMATION
Quadruplex Ampex 1956 The 2” Quad was the first successful videotape format. The name comes from its four-head wheel which rotated 240 times a second. It was still widely used in the industry in the 1980s.
Octaplex RCA Developed for the military.
VR 1500/600 Ampex 1963 May be the first consumer VTR.
Helical SV-201 Sony 1962 Two-head system that was marketed for industrial, educational, and medical applications.
ACR 25 Ampex 1970 Automated recording and playback of televesion commercials.
IVC 9000 IVC 1973 helical scan
TCR 100 "Quad" RCA 1969 These small videotapes allowed broadcasters to access commercials without physically splicing them into the broadcasting program.
FORMATS USING 1” TAPE
DEVELOPER
YEAR
INFORMATION
MVC-10 Machtronics 1962 One of the first commercial 1-inch helical scan videotape recorders in the US. Identical to the PI-3V by Precision Instruments.
PI-3V Precision Instruments 1963 Two-head helical scan recorder. Identical to the MVC-10 by Machtronics.
EV-200 Sony 1964 The first “portable” VTR Sony offered for general use.
EL-3400 Philips 1965 Designed for the industrial/educational markets.
IVC 700/800/900 IVC 1967 Used by TV stations and the military.
UV-340 or EV-210 Sony 1964 1” videotape
1" SMPTE Type A Ampex 1965 Industrial and educational uses.
1" SMPTE Type B Bosch 1976 Was very popular in Europe. Similar to the Type C format, it uses a segmented helical scan on a small-diameter drum. Each video head pass records 52 lines of video information and is therefore segmented and cannot offer still-frame or slow motion.
1" SMPTE Type C Ampex/Sony 1976 Ampex and Sony agreed to a standard 1-inch professional helical format called Type C. Both manufacturers had to slightly modify their designs to create a common format. It is the most popular of the 1” professional formats. Unlike the 2” Quad and the 1” Type B, it offered viewable still frame, slow and fast motion, and picture shuttle. 300 lines of resolution.
BVH-1000 Sony 1976 Competitor of the Type A. Features of Type A and the BVH-1000 were combined into a common, standardized format…Type C. Sony’s first Type C machines were also called BVH-1000.
HDV-1000 Sony 1984 First commercial high-definition format. Recorded component analog video on
1-inch open-reel tape. At the time, HDTV had 1035 active lines. The direct
predecessor of the HDD-1000.
1” Analog HDTV Toshiba 1985 First HDTV VTR
HDD-1000 Sony 1988 First digital component high-definition recorder. At the time, had 1035
active lines. The starting price of the HDD-1000 and the required HDDP-1000 companion processor in 1988 was $600,000, metal evaporated tape cost $2500.00 per hour of tape and each reel weighed nearly 10 pounds.
FORMATS USING 3/4” TAPE
DEVELOPER
YEAR
INFORMATION
¾” U-Matic Sony/ JVC/ Matsushita 1970 One of the most successful formats of all time. Until its release, news acquisitions had primarily been gathered on 16mm film. Three versions. 280 lines of resolution.
¾” U-Matic SP Sony 1986 Improvements over the original format include a higher-energy tape and an extended FM carrier. SP (Superior Performance) had both chroma and luma subcarrier frequencies increased. 340 lines of resolution.
D1 Sony 1987 First digital VTR. Received little acceptance in broadcast where it was designed for, but was welcomed in graphics production. Due to expensive machines and tapes, it was mainly used in high-end postproduction facilities that incorporate special effects with multiple layering of video signal. 460 lines of resolution.
D2 Ampex and Sony 1986 Digital composite format. Advancements in component-based advanced TV ended the interest in composite, including D2. Cassettes hold up to 180 minutes. 450 lines of resolution.
D6 Toshiba/BTS 1995 Digital HDTV. Uses more heads and offers more audio channels than any other videotape format.
Digital Component Technology Ampex 1992 DCT was the first format to employ digital video compression to reduce recorded bit rate.
FORMATS USING 1/2” TAPE
DEVELOPER
YEAR
INFORMATION
CV Sony 1965 CV (Consumer Video/Commercial Video) One of the first “affordable” VTRs for consumers. Decks can switch between colour & b/w.
VTR-600 Concord 1967 Open-reel black-and-white format.
1/2" EIAJ Type 1 Sony/ Panasonic/ others 1969 Electronics Industries Association of Japan. AKA ½” AV (Audio/Visual) Low end industrial and educational recordings. Open-reel.
EIAJ Cartridge Panasonic 1971 AKA Omnivision. Identical to the open-reel EIAJ, only the cartridge makes it different. Tapes were only 30 minutes in length and they had to be completely rewound before it could be removed from the deck.
N1500 Philips 1972 The first commercially available home video cartridge machine introduced on the market. Recorded in color and black-and-white.
AVCO Cartivision Cartivision 1972 Short-lived consumer format that was ahead of its time. It was the first simple consumer video recording and playback system to hit the market.
V-Cord Sanyo 1972 Consumer home video format. The V-Cord II was the first consumer machine to offer two recording speeds, freeze-frame and slow motion.
VX Panasonic/ Quasar 1975 “The Great Time Machine”. Its one-head helical-scan format required a nearly 360-degree tape wrap.
Betamax Sony 1976 Was the first successful consumer videocassette. Was a hit at first but later failed in the market place against VHS. Its initial maximum record time of one hour was a disadvantage initially that it was not able to overcome even when it later offered five hour record times.
VHS JVC 1976 Video home system. The most successful of all home video formats, it was introduced as a competitor of Betamax. 250 lines of resolution. Maximum tape length is 200 minutes in SP mode, which is 600 minutes in EP mode.
VHS-C Compact version of VHS. The “C” stands for compact. With an adapter, tapes will play in a VHS VCR. Maximum tape length is 40 minutes in SP mode, which is 120 minutes in EP mode.
S-VHS JVC and others S=super. Marketed as a high-end consumer format. “S-video” separates the chrominance (color) and luminance (brightness) signals, although not as purely as the true component systems do. VHS tapes may be played and recorded on S-VHS machines, but S-VHS cannot be played nor recorded on VHS machines. 400 lines of resolution. Maximum tape length is 160 minutes.
SVHS-C Compact version of SVHS. With an adapter, tapes will play in a S-VHS VCR. Maximum tape length is 40 minutes.
ED Beta Sony 1987 ED (Enhanced Definition) Introduced as a competition to SVHS.
Betacam Sony 1982 Aka ½” Type L. Developed as a component-recording professional format to be able to use consumer cassettes…Betamax. Records an analog component signal, storing the luminance (Y) in one track and the chrominance (R-Y, B-Y) on another. This splitting of channels provides a crisp, true broadcast quality product. 300 lines of resolution.
M RCA/ Panasonic 1982 Initially called Recam (recording camera) by Panasonic and Hawkeye by RCA. RCA broadcast went out of business shortly after it was released. It was the first component format consisting of two separate signal systems: one for luminance and another for chroma. Originally designed to use VHS tapes.
Video 2000 Philips and Grundig 1979 Used flip-over tapes, similar to audio cassettes. In terms of picture quality, it was a technically superior competitor of VHS and Betamax. Able to play/record 4 hours of video on each side of the cassette it also had its problems such as not being inter-machine compatible. AKA Video Compact Cassette (VCC) even though the tapes were larger than VHS.
MII Panasonic 1985 Introduced as a competitor to beta sp. Splits the video signal into red, green and blue, providing outstanding quality and color. 340 lines of resolution.
Betacam SP Sony 1986 SP (Superior Performance) was an industry standard for most TV stations and high-end production houses up until the late 90s. 340 lines of resolution.
D3 Panasonic 1991 Introduced as Panasonic’s answer to D2, it was promoted as a low-cost digital alternative. Achieved more than twice the recording capacity of D2. 450 lines of resolution.
Digital Betacam Sony 1993 Digital successor to Betacam. Considered to have almost the same quality as D1 at half the cost and size. High end SDTV. Can playback, but not record betacam SP tapes. Sony’s answer to DCT and D5.
D5 Matsushita/ Panasonic 1994 Component, non-compressed digital format. Can playback D3 tapes.
D5HD Panasonic 1994 Compressed HD version of D5. Can work with 1080 line and 720 line HDTV formats.
Betacam SX Sony 1996 Digital format targeted for ENG and newsroom use. Can be sent back to the studio at 2X speed on a standard DS0-3 data connection.
D9 JVC 1995 Digital S. Rivals the much more expensive Digital Betacam in terms of picture quality. Downward compatible with SVHS. 540 lines of resolution.
D9 HD JVC 2000 AKA Digital S-100. Used for recording compressed and sub-sampled HDTV. Uses same tape as D9.
D-VHS JVC/ Matsushita 1997 Consumer digital format designed to be used with satellite dish systems.
W-VHS JVC 1994 Analog HDTV Uses a cassette physically identical with VHS. Due to its high cost, it never caught on as a consumer format, and due to its reduced quality, it never caught on as a professional format.
D11 Sony 1997 AKA HDCAM. Compressed digital HDTV format that employs both subsampling and compression to reduce data bandwidth.
MPEG IMX Sony 2001 Enhanced picture quality and multi-generation performance. Certain models allow playback of all current broadcast beta formats.
FORMATS USING 8 MM TAPE
DEVELOPER
YEAR
INFORMATION
8mm/ Video8 EIAJ and others 1983 Kodak released first 8mm camcorder in 1984. 255 lines of resolution. Maximum tape length is 120 minutes in SP mode or 240 minutes in LP mode.
HI8 Sony 1989 Much improved version of 8mm video. Has an optional second AFM track for stereo sound. 415 lines of resolution. Maximum tape length is 120 minutes in SP mode.
Digital 8 Sony 1999 Records same digital signal as DV onto less expensive Hi8 tapes. Plays back 8mm and Hi8 tapes. A 120 minute Hi8 tape can record 60 minutes of Digital 8. Has analog inputs for digitally archiving existing analog footage. Audio is CD-quality.
FORMATS USING ¼” TAPE
DEVELOPER
YEAR
INFORMATION
Bauer ¼” Bauer 1969 Well-known for its Super-8 amateur movie cameras, Bauer attempted to take part in the video adventure while demise of Super-8 format was announced.
¼” Akai Akai 1969 Open-Reel. Could record video using normal audio tape but the quality was reduced from the special quarter-inch videotape offered by Akai.
Compact Video Cassette Funai/ Technicolor 1984 CVC was the lightest and most portable recording system of its time. It used quarter-inch cassettes in 30-minute lengths, which contributed to its short life.
Pixelvision Fisher Price 198? This was a kid's toy camcorder that recorded black and white video on a standard audio cassette.
DV EIAJ 1996 AKA miniDV (formerly DVC) Many manufacturers released first DV camcorders in 1995 - Sony, Philips, Thomson, Hitachi, Panasonic, etc. First digital recording format available to consumers. Nearly loss-less broadcast quality picture. Maximum tape length is 80 minutes in SP mode or 120 minutes in LP mode. 500 lines of resolution.
D7 Panasonic/ EIAJ 1995 AKA DVCPRO. Capable of 4X playback speed. Decks can play back DVCAM. 530 lines of resolution.
DVCPRO 50 Panasonic 1998 Two more digital channels than DVCPRO.
DVCAM Sony 1996 Sony’s answer to DVCPRO. Includes a feature that allows information to be recorded on a memory chip inside the cassette, such as good and bad take identifiers. 530 lines of resolution.
DVCPRO HD Panasonic 2000 High-definition version of DVCPRO recording the same signal as D9HD. Machines can play all previous forms of DVCPRO tapes as well as DVCAM and DV tapes.
D4 D4 doesn’t exist because the number 4 is considered to be a taboo in Asian cultures.

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