Quote:
Originally Posted by Steve Crook
It was with the Betamax vs VHS war.
Betamax was (is) higher quality although they didn't pay as much attention to the consumer's needs.
Steve
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Many people I know who repair and maintain old Betamax machines and VHS models tell me that once digital tracking was introduced to VHS machines they became the better of the two formats for quality of play back. Also the noise level was greater for multi generation copying for Betamax machines. I know this from my longer edits of Frontios that I had to have noise reduced on top of other corrective work due to the fact they had originated from Betamax multi-generation sources before they reached me.
Like most people who work with rare TV edits and studio material I started to use the S-VHS format once it became more established in the early 1990’s. Even now I still keep S-VHS masters of material I have on DVD due to the possibility of DVD failure so my three S-VHS machines get well maintained to keep them running fine.
Due to the way Blu-Ray encodes information I worry about how well the data will cope with long term storage as the issue with the dyes does not change with the move of formats. The high speed options mean the laser spends less time writing/burning to the dye so playback failure over time is increased once again.
I like progress however the recent issues with the life span of these digital disk formats does cause me great concern.