DVHS on a Budget
Kerhop writes "ecoustics.com has an article on how to convert SVHS tapes to work in DVHS recorders which is similar to modifying a floppy drive (like we did years ago) to double the storage. There's two holes on a DVHS cassette and a single hole on the SVHS tape. The hole common to both permits DVHS tapes to handle SVHS signals; the hole unique to DVHS is what we want to focus on. Just cut off the top four to five millimeters of the pin within the recorder itself."
After reading several mods which are simply a case of bypassing feature restrictions, I wonder if these mods will force manufacturers to forgo the quick-and-dirty upgrade (i.e. same model with features disabled/enabled) and go for the more expensive redesign route?
So the question is, will you be forced to upgrade if you can't mod your current hardware?
Rock that crushes, Paper & Scissors that don't matter.
One might assume that there is a reason for these holes.. Perhaps SVHS media is not as high quality as DVHS?
Be very careful doing this. I read about this on a blog a couple of days ago and tried it with some of the tapes we have an the archive here at work (i work for a local news station on boston). Out of the 5 tapes I tried 3 broke, 1 worked and 1 kind of worked. This is a neat idea but it needs a little more thought before it should be tried with anything that really matters to you.
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Ha! Now I've got you. Instead of purchasing $10 media validated to work in DVHS mode, I'll modify my $500 player! Let's ignore any fundamental quality, design or implementation differences while we're at it ...
This makes lots of sense, just cut of a metal pin (in a video recorder that will not react well to any stray metal filings) rather than bypass the switch that the pin connects to.
I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
There is a reason for the two holes.. it's to tell the deck that there is a quality tape in there...
When your crappy svhs tapes don't work and have dropouts when recording in DVHS mode... don't complain to the company.. you bought sh*tty tape!
it was the same with floppies... I never trusted any floppy that some moron punched a hole in.
This is not feature restriction, the manufacturer is not trying to screw you... They put an extra hole in the tape to tell the player that this tape will actually work with the deck properly!
Cheers,
-ben
Some people are only alive because it's illegal to kill them.
good point about bypassing the switch
to bad you didn't RTFA and see it was a plastic pin
still, good point about bypassing the switch.
I bought some Data-8 tapes from used computer store cheap and was able to use them as 8mm video tapes with no apparent quality difference. I would have tried using them as Hi-8 but I didn't have any devices capable of recording Hi-8. The idea was similar, there are little holes in the bottom of the tape. It appears 1 hole for 8, 2 for hi-8 and 3 for data. (I may be wrong, but that's what I could remember)
This article is about modifying the tape recorder, not the tapes. Surely you didn't break the DVHS pin off of the TV stations recorder, did you?
Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see. - Mark Twain
A hacker in New York uploads new firmware to his 40GB harddrive, and all of the sudden, it's a 400GB!
The quality of the media is what limits the tape, not a pin. A pin just tells the recorder what quality the media is, so it doesn't try to write more complicated data than the medium can store.
Just another "DOJ fascist authoritarian totalitarian bootlicker" -- Zeio
Could you not just cut a hole in the SVHS tape rather than mess up a perfectly good DVHS recorder?
The article mentioned that drilling a hole into the SVHS tapes was considered a "bad idea" for fear of plastic shavings getting on the tape. It was also mentioned that using a soldering iron to melt a hole "didn't work" with the SCHS-->DVHS trick (though it did with the VHS-->SVHS trick. They didn't go into any detail on why it didn't work - I wish they had.
I dub thee... Sir Phobos, Knight of Mars, Beater of Ass.
This is a great hack for all 17 people who have a DVHS recorder, have the time to do the hack, the willingness to modify their expensive gear, the money to replace it once it breaks, AND are too cheap to buy the recommended tape stock.
Upgrade your Betamax tapes to D-Betamax with a toothbrush!
"A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
StupidChildren...the reason jesus is crying
Next up on Slashdot... How to get your old 45's to play in your CD player! Just buy better tapes, people.
Paul Murphy
http://www.murphymaphia.com
I pose these questions because people are increasingly finding that for marketing purposes companies are rebranding and ever-so-slightly modifying things, like casings in this instance, so that they can create different price points while using materials with no particular difference.
Smart people in this community have found out that they can change how their DVD drives work by reflashing the firmware, and some have figured out how to make their low-line burner drives work as the high-end product by similar means. I wouldn't be surprised if someone reflashed the firmware on a hard disk drive, low-level-formatted it, and found that the part was otherwise identical to the model with a quarter more capacity.
There is every reason to assume that "tape is tape" in this instance would apply, and that for the sake of manufacturing ease they've gone to using the same media for both SVHS and DVHS, simply using a different package for the newer, "better" standard.
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
I'd think the critical component here is tape formulation. Digital recordings are more sensitive to tape imperfections than analog, are they not?
Seriously, why bother with this when there are so many better, faster, more capable storage media available today?
--
One if by troll, two if by redundant...
I love it when simple hacks add value or allow us to do things we would normally have to pay for - and would make the designers sh*t bricks.
IE:
-using pencil to overclock processors
-clipping the floppy to double capacity
wiring a usb end to an xbox controller
-that firmware upgrade to the camera (Canon?) that made it as good as the super expensive model
I'm sure there are more cool hacks like that out there
The rock, the vulture, and the chain
because you can't record HDTV to dvd+/-RW.
well you could, but 1080i runs almost 4mbyte/sec which means you'd get ~19 minutes recording time on your typical 4.7gb DVD-RW.
do you really want to use 9.4gb dual layer dvd-r for all your recordings? you do know how freaking expensive they are... and there's no 9.4gb rw yet. not to mention that's still only 38 minutes.
Along the same lines, we hardly use the VCR anymore, we just record stuff on the computer; once we got a HDTV, we just got another tuner capable of pulling in HD over-the-air programming. Considered getting a hardware appliance like a T*Vo but balked at the idea of paying a monthly subscription fee for something we could get for free (e.g. a two-week listings / scheduling service like TitanTV.com and the devices/programs it supports.)
So, given the choice between buying a DVHS recorder, a T*Vo, and a HTPC, I'll go with a HTPC. Disk space and burnable media are cheap enough (and take up less physical space to store.)
The up-front cost of a HTPC setup vs. a DVHS recorder may indeed be higher, and the cost of media is still higher, but it seems pretty competitive right now. (My thinking is, say a buck per gig on a hard drive, typical 1-hour program is ~8 GB. DL discs (8.5 GB, $6-$10?) here compete with the price of DVHS tapes, but only store half as much as a tape right now. But costs of DL discs will fall quickly (remember how much 4.7 GB DVD-R media USED to cost?) and Blu-ray or DVD-HD will even this out quite a bit more, soon enough.
More importantly -- what's your time and physical storage space worth? (I realize that a HTPC could end up being pretty large, and could also become quite the time-sink, but: in my case, I'm talking about a Mac mini and a ready-made eyeTV hardware/software package from ElGato.)
The one downside to my argument is the 5C flag nonsense. I'd just as soon *not* support yet another copy protection scheme by paying for a DVHS player made by one of those five companies. But the tradeoff is, I have no way of saving anything that is 5C flagged, ie for 'copy once' use. Though there are software based 'virtual' DVHS apps for streaming transport streams over firewire, I haven't seen any 'cracks' for them that disable 5C (yet.)
Figure 2-10: Photo has two circles on the tape with one hole, and one circle on the tape with two holes. Figure 2-11: The circles are the screw holes instead of the sensing holes.
That's what blue-laser DVDs are for. They can store up to 27gb per side. (54gb for dual layer). Toshiba and NEC are even proposing a blue laser standard that reuses existing DVD manufacturing technologies (for minimal transition costs), that will allow for 20gb rewritables, supposedly available sometime this year.
Uh, this isn't a way to "convert SVHS tapes to work in DVHS recorders." It's a way to convert your DVHS recorder to work with SVHS tapes.
thats nice, now show me where you can buy one, today.
i can show you were to buy dvhs, today. to record that hdtv program being aired next week.
and er, how much do your blue-laser drives and media cost?
But it doesnt mean its a great idea. While the signal will take if you drill the first hole (or the SVHS hole) onto a regular VHS tape, the tape after repeated play will not hold the signal nearly as well as an SVHS tape of similar plays, and recorded on the same decks. Many SVHS decks, such as the commercial Panasonic VS4820 have a feature called SVHS-ET which will override the pin trick and just put the SVHS signal on VHS tape.
I used to work for VMS, and we used the VS4820s almost exclusivly along with broadcast-grade SVHS and VHS tapes baught in bulk (for archival, editing, and professional video selling). Did some tests to see how legit this was and the VHS tapes did fail sooner one summer. How much sooner as compared to the SVHS tapes wasnt recorded as we only went until one tape failed (in this case the VHS), compared the signal to the other (which was much better) and went back to work. The difference in tape is marginal for many, but can make a world of difference given a different application.
This has been done for ages, the forcing of various signals onto tapes not intended for them. Works great for transporting material from one location to another to be used once or twice, but its definately not ideal for long term use.
We don't need an "overrated" so much as we need a "you completely missed the parent's point, dumbass..."
Troll me if you will, but I think it's a money question!)
I've been doing this for 7 years now on my JVC DVHS recorder. Never had a problem, and the tapes are readily available and cheaper.
I wonder how this is news, though, since this technique has been around since DVHS first came out.
Except in many (not all) cases, it makes more sense to only have one product to manufacture, the better one, and then to limit usage for the cheaper one. CPUs come to mind (486SX did have a unconnected fpu; different frequencies often mean no more than a resistor or switch)
I'm pretty sure I read ages and ages ago when I was using DAT to record things, that you could do a similar trick with normal tape and a DAT recorder...
Sure... Look here. They are priced right now, anywhere from $1000 US to $2000 US. Blank media is available right now stateside, for about $25 for the 25gb media, and $50 for the 50gb media.
I think I remember seeing somewhere that LG has one available, that will be closer to $900 US, which for right now seems reasonable, as they did just come out within the last year. Blu-Ray production is supposed to ramp up pretty fast this year.
I've seen DVHS recorders available right now for $300 to $900, so it looks like right now, BluRay is at the high end of the DVHS spectrum, but that could change quickly in the coming year or two.
This is stupid. There is no reason to store the full-bitrate MPEG-2 HDTV stream. You can requant the MPEG-2 in realtime, and perhaps halve the bitrate, without significant quality loss... So, you're up to 80 minutes on a single DVD (dual-layer)... Besides that, you can get much more significant gains by re-encoding to MPEG-4 (or VP6, WMV, etc) which would at least double that, giving you 160 minutes on a dual-layer DVD without noticable quality loss, or 80 minutes on your single-layer DVD. Since most movies run under 100 minutes or so, you would just have to lose slightly more quality to get it to fit on a dirt-cheap DVD.
Yes, they are less expensive than DVHS tapes. Even if they were more expensive, I think most people have come to realize the serious advantages to random-access storage.
Besides, who need DVDs... USB2/Firewire hard drives are even better, cheap, and extremely high capacity.
Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
Granted I didn't have critical data, it was always games and puzzles or school papers that had already been printed out- but I never had any problems with any... for years. The maunfacturers are trying to screw us, they are trying to maximize profit after all. The extra holes are generally help insure proper function -within certain parameters! It would be more useful to implement a more sophisticated mechanism for adjusting for tape quality- but that's not economically advantageous
You don't need to modify the DVHS deck. When you put in an SVHS tape you can just press the "DVHS" button on the front of the JVC DVHS decks. Then it will treat the SVHS tape as a DVHS tape and let you record HD onto it. I have been done this onto more than 250 tapes. You DON'T have to modify the player and therefore you DON'T have to void your warranty.
What's wrong with drilling a hole in the SVHS tape? Why is this guy damaging expensive hardware instead of hacking the tape?
And why the hell is he not using DVD-R for his digital video needs?
"You got temporary storage gains, but your discs would quickly fail. Not a good deal in the meantime."
Did you actually try it?
Anybody that was used to day in day out 8" floppy operations knew a bit about what brands of media worked and what didn't. This data was applicable to 5" floppies and then 3".
My first box of low density 3" floppies cost me $50 US.
If you used cheap floppies and punchd them you'd get a certain failure rate roughly equivalent to the failure rate of unpunched floppies on low density drives. Crap is crap no matter how many holes you punch in it.
I've used hundreds of punched disks. After a year of 18 hours a day they'd start to get errors, punched or unpunched. Use good media. Duh.
<rant>
It appears only 2 people besides me RTFA and slashdot is beginning to make usenet look as credible as a peer reviewed scientific journal by comparison.
RTFA or don't bother posting. You may well be a clueless fucktard but posting here without reading no longer keeps this fact hidden. Spam waste less of my time than you nimrods.
And spare me the friggin dupe alerts. If that's all you have to say then STFU.
</rant>
Need Mercedes parts ?
I agree with you 100% on the rest of your post, but I must nitpick this last paragraph.
CD-Rs labeled "Music" actually are different than data CD-Rs. They have some extra metadata pre-burned onto them that many(most?) stand-alone CD recorders look for, and won't work without.
I've tried and tried to use a hole punch to double the storage
of my CD's but they just don't play as well with the extra holes...
I work at a TV newtwork. A couple of the other engineers/techs there have purchased a few of these for home usage. They wanted a cheap way of recording HDTV currently. When the HD-DVD recorders come out, they may buy one of them. But in the mean time, they are using one of these.
I just saw them friday. The HD tapes video quality looks wonderful on an HD screen. "End of Days" looked great. Plus, you can record up to 35 hours of SD video to it (analog or digital SD) for those of us still on analog.
Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
Um, for exchanging content? If I want to give a friend a copy of a movie, I'm not giving my external hard drive OR trying to send a 4.3 GB movie over the net.
But then again I guess my argument is worthless since both of those things would be illegal.
Have you tried playing tapes from 7 years ago? A few years ago, I went through a box of 1.44 floppies from when I was in high school looking for some old DOS progrmas I wrote. Most (but not all) of the "real" 1.44 HD floppies worked fine. None of the 720K punched and formatted to 1.44MB worked at all.
Good thing nothing I did back then was that important.
My other first post is car post.
There was something similar when the news station I used to work for switched from Beta SP to Beta SX for acquisition - Sony pitched their very expensive SX tapes (with a 'special' yellow shell), but we quickly realized that any old SP tape would work just fine. In fact using an SP tape meant you got double the recording time (SX used a slower tape speed). I expect that this is mostly a case of JVC trying to make money wherever they can. Of course, there are differences in tape stock (thickness of the tape itself, oxide density, particle size, etc) so they could also be trying to limit calls from angry customers who try to use some crap tape they picked up at a garage sale that had already been recorded over a couple of dozen times.
Actually, a similar trick can be used (and has been used for a long time) to use standard VHS tape in SVHS recording mode on SVHS VCRs.
The end result is a picture that's better than typical VHS, although whether or not you get the quality of a "real" SVHS tape depends solely on how good the quality of your VHS tape is.
The hack, IIRC, involved drilling an extra hole in the video tape. Easy peasy.
recoding sort of kills the whole point of recording a 1080i HDTV stream in the first place.
on a bigscreen TV, the quality loss is VERY noticeable. which is the whole point behind recording the original full rate HDTV stream.
of course if you don't care about video quality, watching it on some crappy NTSC tv or 21" PC monitor then you probably don't care, so go ahead and recode it into pixelated mushiness, compress the stuffing out of it and shoehorn it into those DVDs.
Too small? Surely you mean 'not small enough' or 'too big'?
They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
Ooops! Yes, that is what I meant! Sorry!
They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
That's pretty shortsighted. Within 10-15 years you'll be able to do that in just a couple of minutes and you won't bat an eyelid when doing it. You might briefly think back to the days when it took days to get a movie downloaded, but then your download will be finished and you can move on with your life...
I think it will be a lot sooner than 10 years that we will be able to do that in just a couple of minutes. But the original poster said what do we need DVDRs for. And right now, I feel that we need them for things such as exchanging media with others.
is that $25/$50 for rewritable media or write-once?
is rewritable blu-ray media even available yet?
You aren't really paying attention, are you?
When re-encoding to MPEG-4 or another modern codec, you can get about a 4X reduction WITHOUT ANY REAL QUALITY LOSS. No, it ISN'T noticable on a bigscreen TV. MPEG-2 is a very old and underpowered codec, and it's absolutely mind-boggling that they chose to use it in a new TV standard...
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Clearly, you have never owned an external hard drive. Exchanging files with others is incredibly easy. You meet each other somewhere, plug-in the drives, copy files, and in a matter of very few minutes, you both have the files you want.
Personally, if I had to send a very large file to someone, I wouldn't have any reservations about copying it to a spare 40GB hard drive I have laying around, boxing it up, and paying a few dollars to ship it to them. You can get a older hard drive for $20 these days.
And finally, you can always span a video across several DVDs if you want to give someone a copy, but you really don't want your own copy stored that way if you can avoid it...
Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
Er, please point me to an example hardware/software configuration which can do this, priced within an an order of magnitude of $500...
Strange things are afoot at the Circle-K.
you have absolutely no idea what you're talking about.
you can't get a 4x reduction from 1080i without sacrificing something.
i've been encoding video for ~10 years now, i've extensively used all the various codecs. mpeg4 is great for low bitrate PC generated video (which is what it was designed for), but it is not significantly better than mpeg2 to get the miracle compression you attribute to it. mpeg4 scales down very well (eg think streaming video over dialups) but it does not scale up signficantly better than mpeg2.
i know you think your 4x reduced mpeg4 rips look "good" on a pc monitor, but they look horrible blown up on a bigscreen. artifacting all over the place. it's simple physics -- you can't generate detail from missing bits, mpeg4 is not so advanced beyond mpeg2 that it can pull off compression miracles.
mpeg4 in theory can get very high compression rates through object based scene analysis (again, PC generated video), but nobody does this yet. in reality its just another simple DCT motion vector scheme.
don't believe me? try this analysis by an mpeg expert.
I actually do own an external hard drive. But when I want to give a friend a movie, I can simply hand them a DVDR and be done with it. I don't have to go to their house, plug in my external hard drive (and pray that they have USB2, since quite a few of my friends still do not), then wait ~5+ minutes for it to copy. And that's if I want to give them only one movie (or 1 DVDR worth of stuff), which often I do not.
Your idea of us meeting somewhere hinges on the fact that they have a laptop which a few of my friends still do not have, and that we have the time or wish to do these copy-fests (as copying ~4 DVDs worth of stuff over USB2 will have you sitting somewhere for quite a while. If you want to copy all 3 LOTR:EEs, be prepared to wait a while). So under given conditions an external hard drive may work better, but for the majority of users I feel DVDRs are preferrable.
As for spanning a video over several DVDs, the only videos that I have had to do that with have been DVD movies, which I wish to watch on my set-top dvd player. True another case could be that I would like to have a 16GB HD transport stream instead of 4*4GB files, but I'm not going to be capturing/downloading a raw transport stream anytime soon (~4 GB XviD encodes w/ AC3 work for me just fine).
I must be missing something if you find this difficult.
Requant is open source, and now even included with transcode (tcrequant)... MPlayer/ffmpeg do very, very fast MPEG-4 encoding at higher quality than Xvid.
The hardware is whatever you can scrounge up... You could put together a $200 computer to handle all this, though it might be on the slow side if you are doing full re-encoding... Spend the extra $300 on a top-end CPU and faster RAM, and you're set.
Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
Quite the opposite, I know a shitload about what I'm talking about.
It makes no difference what the designers intended. In addition, it's clear you have experience with only a select few MPEG-4 codecs. I have don't extensive high-bitrate encoding with MPEG-4 codecs (primarily libavcodec) and I can say both from experience, and from theory, that MPEG-4 is capable of re-compressing MPEG-2 material down to approximately a quarter of the original size, with practically no noticable loss in visual quality. I suggest you try it yourself, either using ffmpeg or mplayer.
This is ridiculous. You're making bullshit claims based on nothing at all.
Funny, that's exactly what MPEG-2 is doing in the first place... Removing unnecessary visual information, and using complex mathematics to compress the rest down to a fraction of it's original size. MPEG-4 has many, many more features than MPEG-2, and despite your claims that it's only good for low bitrates, more advanced motion vectors, better quantization, better motion estimation, et al., are not partial to one bitrate over another, they improve picture quality/decrease size, no matter what the material.
You're taking some crappy Divx encode, and treating it as if it's the best MPEG-4 can possibly do. You have never SEEN anything I have encoded, so your mindless attempts to discount my points are completely baseless.
I'm more of an expert than most self-proclaimed experts. I'm not convinced by some mindnumbing press-release drivel, with absolutely no technical information.
Don't believe me? try some actual code, written by the REAL experts.
Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
Your points are really irrelivant, because this thread is entirely about HD, and has nothing to do with standard DVDs. You stand-alone DVD player won't play 1080i, even if you record it to a DVD, which completely eliminates the entire reason most people buy DVD-Burners.
Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant