LGR Oddware - Danmere Backer VHS Hard Drive Backup System

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 авг 2024
  • Backing up your computer's files to VHS videotape with a VCR? Sure, it was 1996 so why not! Trying out the wonderfully weird Danmere Backer16 tape backup system for Windows 3.1 and 95 PCs.
    ● Consider supporting LGR on Patreon:
    / lazygamereviews
    ● Social links:
    / lazygamereviews
    / lazygamereviews
    ● Background music credits:
    Rhodes To Heaven 2, Book of Jazz 1, Million Dollar Bill 1
    www.epidemicsou...

Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @QuantumBraced
    @QuantumBraced 4 года назад +137

    This is actually pretty amazing because a 5 GB HDD was very expensive in 1996, but VHS was dirt cheap, so you could archive a ton of data almost for free.

    • @syrus3k
      @syrus3k Год назад +1

      yeah it was a great solution I think.

    • @Zeina107
      @Zeina107 Год назад +1

      It says 1500 mb. So thats what 1 gb and 300 mbs?
      5 tapes could store more then a 5gb at a fraction of the cost.
      I would not say for “free” im not sure if you recall the cost of blank tapes but depending on the store. It was not cheap. If i recall correctly an 8 hour tape costed around 10-12 per tape.
      A 6 hour one costing around 6-8 a tape.
      Radio shack always charged more for that stuff tho. That and tv coaxel cables

    • @wickmesh
      @wickmesh Год назад +1

      I had one of these. The time required to perform a reliable backup made this less "free" than you'd think.

    • @calebbenedict5587
      @calebbenedict5587 Год назад +5

      Tape was and still is to this day the highest density storage medium - in recent years there have been tape drives developed that have capacities up to 580 TB

    • @QuantumBraced
      @QuantumBraced Год назад +1

      @@calebbenedict5587 Yes but the drives are insanely expensive.

  • @TheBrokenLife
    @TheBrokenLife 7 лет назад +870

    Use it to back up all of your sensitive data to RUclips. Unlimited free cloud storage!

    • @DamienCooley
      @DamienCooley 7 лет назад +343

      The cloud doesn't exist, it's just someone else's VHS tapes.

    • @Omnipotentous
      @Omnipotentous 7 лет назад +95

      This is... a hilarious idea.

    • @Slay1337pl
      @Slay1337pl 7 лет назад +68

      Not really, you could make a 1080p video with a 128x128 checkerboard pattern for example, then read it in a program, bit by bit. Black square = 1, white square = 0.

    • @TechGamesAU
      @TechGamesAU 7 лет назад +12

      The video would have to be raw uncompressed surely?

    • @cvmagic404
      @cvmagic404 7 лет назад +65

      I actually think the idea is notable, and despite the potential data loss it can potentially be made up by using Parchive. It'd make the backup process longer but allow for all the files to be recovered assuming it can restore any data at all.
      Clint, since you have the hardware on hand would you try that experiment for us, take a 10MB dataset, generate a Parchive of said data set, backup the dataset along with the generated Par2 files, upload it to youtube, then take the output of it and see if you can recover any data and if so can Parchive repair any data lost.

  • @fullmetalgenesis
    @fullmetalgenesis 7 лет назад +97

    "This is one of my favorite VCR's." Everything we love about Clint is summed up in the fact that in 2017 he can make that statement and mean it.

  • @B0Boman
    @B0Boman 7 лет назад +1364

    You should start backing up all your RUclips videos to VHS. You know, just in case.

    • @mapesdhs597
      @mapesdhs597 7 лет назад +62

      Wouldn't surprise me if what Google/YT are doing causes a storage demand spike next year.

    • @jblahut3591
      @jblahut3591 6 лет назад +71

      No, he should use this to back up his files to youtube!

    • @savage1267
      @savage1267 6 лет назад +4

      B0Boman Awesome.

    • @Vegas242
      @Vegas242 6 лет назад +34

      J Blahut Lol he should've made a bonus video where he uploads a full 6 hour video of some files he backed up with it, and in the video the files he should've backed up would some of the recent LGR RUclips videos just for the hilarity of it all

    • @hothmandon
      @hothmandon 6 лет назад +5

      LMFAO!!!

  • @hakemon
    @hakemon 7 лет назад +1269

    So I guess you could say, these are Danmere impossible to find?

    • @LGR
      @LGR  7 лет назад +282

      Heh.

    • @hakemon
      @hakemon 7 лет назад +42

      This product reminds me of the Sony PCM device that they sold, that recorded CD audio PCM data to VHS. The on-screen data looks very much the same even.
      PS: I was backing up data to VHS back in the day, but not with one of these, I was using a JVC D-VHS deck and used Firewire to transfer. I had some kind of program that converted data into what was essentially MPEG2 video with colorful blocks all over the place, and it represented data in such a weird way. I can't remember the name of the software though, now. It was for Mac OS.

    • @Kalvinjj
      @Kalvinjj 7 лет назад +15

      Whoa with D-VHS deck you could get around 50GB per tape wasn't it (tho that was the tape capacity, not necessarily what you would get with that method)? Tape backup has always been quite epic on the size classes. Even nowadays you find many TB sized tape systems for business backups.

    • @hakemon
      @hakemon 7 лет назад +10

      DVHS tapes were made of a different material, so they weren't exactly quite like VHS. But, I have successfully used SVHS tapes as DVHS tapes, but the playback sometimes broke up more as a result.

    • @NJRoadfan
      @NJRoadfan 7 лет назад +6

      DVHS still used oxide tape, but it was a higher quality formula then standard VHS and SVHS tapes.

  • @davidsummers6700
    @davidsummers6700 7 лет назад +88

    A part of me now wants LGR to transfer a ~2.5GB 1080p mp4 to a VHS tape.

    • @rfvtgbzhn
      @rfvtgbzhn 4 года назад +7

      @@dgpsf Also D-VHS was introduced in 1998 and could store up to 50GB on tapes that where backwards compatible to S-VHS and VHS, however it was never widely used for data storage. Actually according to Wikipedia you could even use S-VHS tapes for storage instead of D-VHS tapes which was cheaper but maybe also less reliable.

  • @neohermitist
    @neohermitist 3 года назад +3

    I was an engineer at Sony Magnetic Products in Dothan, Alabama from the mid 90s to 2010. We produced millions of cassettes a month. We would process a 2 feet x 54,000 feet jumbo roll of tape at 4,000 fpm. Our plant supplied the Western Hemisphere with VHS tape for years (I think maybe even that Maxell tape shown in the video).

  • @hotcheeksoreilly
    @hotcheeksoreilly 7 лет назад +350

    I reverse engineered these things way back and wrote Linux drivers. Everything except converting the bit stream to/from video is done in software.

    • @victoralander1398
      @victoralander1398 5 лет назад +25

      That sounds interesting can I get a project link?

    • @timrichter1980
      @timrichter1980 5 лет назад +13

      I am interested, too!

    • @worldsendace
      @worldsendace 4 года назад +21

      Is it possible to convert Data into a modern hd mp4 Video and decode it afterwards? That would be nice.

    • @DarklinkXXXX
      @DarklinkXXXX 4 года назад +9

      Is it upstreamed in the Linux kernel?

    • @pancudowny
      @pancudowny 4 года назад +5

      And Sony did it first, in the early-80s with PCM audio recording... the same thing DAT employed.

  • @Geardos1
    @Geardos1 7 лет назад +166

    backing up a wood grain 486 on to VHS
    You hit a high water mark with this one

  • @curiouscrandall1
    @curiouscrandall1 4 года назад +18

    Well, just found this 2.5 years later. I owned one of these, and used it on Win3.1 and Win95. If you set the IRQ and DMA correctly (!) it works fine on both.
    When I first got it, I found that compressed backups had unreported data errors. I emailed Danmere, who had me send them a VHS tape with some sample data on it. Sure enough, there was a bug in the decompressor - they were very grateful, fixed the bug, and I might still have the hand-written floppy with the updated software they sent me. (The verify process worked by re-compressing the data, and comparing the compressed output with the tape contents, so the decompress process was never checked).
    It was actually pretty reliable. It was worth looking at the output on a TV, to make sure it was working.
    The one time it failed hard was if there was a crease in the tape. The encoding had error correction, and it would correct pretty messy playback, but it could not tolerate losing the frame number at the top of the TV frame. The loss of an entire TV frame would kill the file it was part of - all the error correction was in each frame, there was no frame-to-frame correction (2D, not 3D). A crease causes a bar of interference that rises up the frame, eventually breaking the frame sync and - losing the frame.

    • @ThrilloVanHouten
      @ThrilloVanHouten Год назад

      Do you know what kind of error correction this used?

  • @ffmfg
    @ffmfg 6 лет назад +11

    As as avid Arvid user in the 90s I have to make some notes here. 1. Reliability is actually excellent. I've transferred my entire archive of tapes that I didn't touch since late 90s around 2009-2010 to HDD. From 20+ tapes I lost files in the single digits. 2. At the time of the introduction price/MB was insanely good. Remember HDD sizes back then. Arvid 1020 (the first popular model) allowed 2GB on 180 minute tape (without compression!). It meant multiple full HDD backups on one tape. Even when CDs started to get popular, tape could store 3+ CD backups on 1 tape, way before CD writers became accessible price-wise.
    3. Convenience. Arvid controlled VCR via IR emitter, so everything was done via software after you put the tape in.

  • @nathansmith3608
    @nathansmith3608 5 лет назад +84

    "Google how to transfer files on Wi-Fi"
    "no listen, Bob, let's just order another VHS Backer & link them"
    "Ok"

    • @markpenrice6253
      @markpenrice6253 4 года назад +3

      That's actually not the worst idea, or at least wouldn't have been at the time. You could turn the encoding rate way up and have something with the transfer speed of a pair of 10mbit network cards, or a Zip or 2x or better CD writer (plus a fast-ish read rate), for somewhat lower price. Be useful for bulk data transfer / duplication or mass imaging etc.

    • @gurintto
      @gurintto 4 года назад +2

      @@markpenrice6253 I guess if you worked in a TV studio that already had video links all around the building / between locations, it could have been useful. Pretty niche use-case though

    • @NiHaoMike64
      @NiHaoMike64 4 года назад +1

      Back in the day, combining it with a wireless video sender might actually be a good way to send files!

  • @saddle1940
    @saddle1940 4 года назад +31

    I remember our business looked at these to see what reliability you could get. I thought back then what they really lacked was an infrared output to control the VCR and better error correction options to rebuild files that were badly recorded. There was no global index section to the tapes (you had to fast forward yourself to near where the files were stored and there was no feedback mechanism for the VCR to report where it was on the tape. The audio channel could have been used for that if the tape was "formatted". Even just a spot in the data file on the PC to type in the minutes and seconds for start and stop would have helped.

    • @lorevids_
      @lorevids_ 4 месяца назад

      Replying to a 3 year old comment, but oh well. I have one of these (somewhere) and it showed a frame or block number of some kind at the bottom of the screen (when you play the tape to a tv). When restoring files, it would say what block it needed and you could ffwd to just before that number.

  • @adammorrison9705
    @adammorrison9705 3 года назад +16

    This device makes 103% more sense after watching Techmoan's videos about early digital audio convertors, notably the ones that used VHS.

  • @InventorOfYouTube
    @InventorOfYouTube 6 лет назад +561

    my dad had that vcr. i would put black electrical tape over it to hide the fact it was recording Playboy at Night...

    • @JF32304
      @JF32304 6 лет назад +37

      LOL! WWMD... What Would Macgyver Do.

    • @Archangelm127
      @Archangelm127 6 лет назад +25

      /highfive

    • @austinismadcrunk
      @austinismadcrunk 5 лет назад +24

      I did that with "Skinemax" lol

    • @roflcopter117
      @roflcopter117 5 лет назад +22

      Legend.

    • @Wflash00
      @Wflash00 5 лет назад +17

      Just how? That's brutal
      Do I even want to know?

  • @leocomerford
    @leocomerford 5 лет назад +20

    I saw this in a shop back in the '90s: it seemed almost too good to be true. It's a pity that VHS backup never took off at the time, it could have been very useful.

  • @ecksdee3145
    @ecksdee3145 7 лет назад +55

    "150k per second" does that mean that Australia's Internet loads from VHS?

  • @thegamerguru97
    @thegamerguru97 7 лет назад +167

    My job as a volunteer IT tech at my college for the past 2 years was to lug tapes from the server to the safe, so I can confirm they're still used for legal reasons...and also to make me walk up and down stairs

    • @jennteal5265
      @jennteal5265 7 лет назад +32

      thegamerguru97 My husband had to drive 5 miles off site to store them "in the bunker." Government back up can be... Interesting 🤣

    • @TheBrokenLife
      @TheBrokenLife 7 лет назад +41

      I worked in a Verizon (then GTE) data center from 98-2001 as a "tape ape" and we had a library of about 800,000 data tapes and 12 large tape silos (and dozens of smaller systems all over the place). We even had some processes that were still using reel-to-reel tapes (which held about 2mb as I recall) that we had to then physically mail to the customer (Missouri state medicaid being one of them). We also housed the GM OnStar servers and they required physical tapes too (though they were normal cassette tapes).
      If the mainframe requested a tape not in the silo a message would come up on a series of TVs hung from the ceiling and we'd have to go chase it down and manually load it. Some days that was as many as 60 tapes a minute so you were constantly running (literally... we had to maintain a certain "mount" time of less than 60 seconds... we usually kept it under 40) around a football field sized area filled with was looked like 8 track tapes. The silos would also generate a pull and eject list every day that was generally 1000-3000 tapes that would go to off-site storage about 5 miles away and load a combination of blank and additional data tapes to replace them... EVERY DAY.
      Keep in mind this was well into the era when 256MB USB drives were dirt cheap and widely available. I once did the math on what it would take to replace the entire library with CDRs put them in a silo of their own and it was a shocking low number. Something like a couple thousand discs. I ran the math out over a year for the expense of replacing 1/2 of the discs every single day and it was far less than the cost of paying us all to mess with the tapes. Even at that, it took them until 2009 to finally kill almost all of the tape operations and perform their backups digitally to server farms all across the US. I'm not surprised that your university hasn't figured that out yet, but I am disappointed.

    • @thegamerguru97
      @thegamerguru97 7 лет назад +4

      Maxwelhse it's England so everything's slow to adapt, that and from what I gathered from the team leader they need to have physical backups they can hand over to law enforcement should the need arise. They did digital backups from what I recall as well but being a college (UK equivalent to the US's last 2 years of high school) it was fairly small scale.

    • @NoJusticeNoPeace
      @NoJusticeNoPeace 7 лет назад +34

      I was in a junk store and saw an old AES Plus word processing system and decided to pick it up on a whim. It weighed over a hundred pounds, the keys were bakelite, and the monitor would glow for up to ten minutes after being turned off and depowered. It had two 8 inch floppy drives, but it didn't come with software, so I called AES in Montreal. No one there recognized the serial number of the machine, but a few days later I got a call back from a woman somewhere in Europe who had been with AES for decades and recognized the model. She told me that Honeywell-Bull owned the rights to the software, and still sold it.
      I contacted Honeywell-Bull and they confirmed that they had the AES Plus operating system and software on 8 inch floppies and that they'd be pleased to sell me a copy... for something like $400. I politely declined, but it's amusing and frankly amazing to think that somewhere, in a dusty corner of a warehouse which probably looks like the one from the end of Indiana Jones, there is an old, cobwebbed crate filled with shiny new shrinkwrapped 8 inch floppies for a word processing system which became obsolete in the 1970s.

    • @tenchimod
      @tenchimod 6 лет назад

      That was my job back in 2002, shuttling tapes from the server room to the off-site vault.

  • @davidewhite69
    @davidewhite69 3 года назад +2

    in the early nineties one of the Amiga magazines printed plans for building your own back up your hard drive to VHS system, and provided a shareware backup application on the cover disk. it used the RGB out which converted the signal to composite and the parallel port, from memory it cost me about twenty Australian dollars to make it, it was slow and cumbersome, but it did work

  • @Pandurris
    @Pandurris 7 лет назад +10

    Awesome content as always! This VHS backup system for PC remembered me about a device made and sold only in my country (Chile) called "Video Cartridge" by Turbo Software for the Atari XE/XL systems late in the 80's. Basically it was a cartridge connected to a VHS player via RCA cable to the video out of the VHS and the device came with a tape with 305 Atari games. For that years the loading times were amazing! I had this when I was a kid.

  • @seancancook1
    @seancancook1 7 лет назад +161

    Best buy still selling VCR head cleaner. WHAT?!

    • @shorty6890
      @shorty6890 7 лет назад +64

      Sean H I work at best buy, and yes we do. We still sell walkman CD players. The 90's are still real.

    • @jasonhenson7946
      @jasonhenson7946 7 лет назад +41

      I guess it means people are still buying them?

    • @TheBrokenLife
      @TheBrokenLife 7 лет назад +40

      Just for the record, and I say this only because old tech like this is becoming more interesting to younger audiences who never had it the first time around, you're better off cleaning the heads by hand and they're usually very easy to get to by simply removing the top cover of the machine. A standard issue alcohol wipe from a first aid kit is usually all you need. If it leaves some lint behind, hit it with a can of air duster. You'll probably want to replace the belts anyhow so you may as well just do it all at once when you're inside the machine.
      A bigger issue with old VCRs is that the heads may have become magnetized, especially if it was left with a tape in it for the last 20 years. You need to degauss them in order to fix that and your money is probably better spent on the tool for that (about $20) than a head cleaning kit.

    • @dickkickem
      @dickkickem 7 лет назад +12

      I went into my local Best Buy and they had a couple fax machines and ancient yellowed landlines standing up still.

    • @ccricers
      @ccricers 7 лет назад +12

      I want one of those walkman players.

  • @sqike001ton
    @sqike001ton 7 лет назад +170

    omg he has figured out how to set the clock on a VCR

    • @therealgreese
      @therealgreese 5 лет назад +4

      That is exactly what I thought the first time I saw it.

    • @abhineshsethumadhava
      @abhineshsethumadhava 5 лет назад +3

      dont know if that was a valid time though..

    • @justanotheryoutubechannel
      @justanotheryoutubechannel 5 лет назад +5

      Why is everyone so mystified by this? Sure, I didn’t know when my family were still using a VCR to timeshift, but we stopped when I was like 5, so I never learned. Nowadays though I know exactly how to set it on my laptop, I figured it out almost instantly, I didn’t even want to change it; I just saw it and I figured it out. Not that it makes any difference though, some internal battery failed years ago and now the clock doesn’t save.

  • @wettuga2762
    @wettuga2762 3 года назад +2

    LGR: I have all my videos backed up to VHS!
    Me: Cool, pick up a VCR and let's watch them!
    LGR: That's not exactly how it works...

  • @deusexaethera
    @deusexaethera 4 года назад +115

    SEND IT TO TECHMOAN SO HE CAN BACK UP HIS COMPUTER TO HIS RECORDABLE LASERDISC MACHINE

    • @sweetestperfection90
      @sweetestperfection90 4 года назад +4

      I think this is a job for Vinyl Video actually!

    • @deusexaethera
      @deusexaethera 4 года назад +7

      @@sweetestperfection90: If he had a professional vinyl cutter that would be even more interesting, but I _know_ he has a Laserdisc recorder.

    • @adamrandall2996
      @adamrandall2996 3 года назад +3

      (9 months late to the party) Damn I would kill for a CED/VHD recorder!

  • @pkaulf
    @pkaulf 7 лет назад +9

    Fun fact - the 44.1khz standard CD audio rate comes directly from early digital audio recorders that used VHS tapes. It was the highest usable rate that you could fit into a frame of NTSC video.

  • @EposVox
    @EposVox 7 лет назад +363

    Is... is there a receipt just randomly chilling in your capture PC? lol

    • @LGR
      @LGR  7 лет назад +227

      Yep, the receipt for the capture PC. I keep all my receipts!

    • @EposVox
      @EposVox 7 лет назад +47

      Haha I do too, just not in PCs xD Great video. Working on VHS archiving this year myself, so interesting look - even if it's the opposite direction I'm archiving.

    • @Peter-iw3ob
      @Peter-iw3ob 7 лет назад +4

      EposVox I thought maby you mixed it up for a IDE cable until I took another look, there really is a recipt lol

    • @TheLuckyDingo
      @TheLuckyDingo 7 лет назад +29

      Garfield There's no such thing as a perfect boyfri-
      "Yep, the receipt for the capture PC. I keep all my receipts!"

    • @jordananderson8299
      @jordananderson8299 6 лет назад +1

      5:40 is that the only one

  • @coyote_den
    @coyote_den 7 лет назад +164

    9 MB/minute or 150 KB/sec: exactly the same as a 1x CD-ROM drive. This is not a coincidence.
    Digital audio tracks were originally sent to CD mastering on VHS or Beta tapes recorded using a PCM adapter. 150 KB/sec is the most you can reliably store on videotape, which determined the 16-bit/44.1kHz sample rate of CD-DA. (They wanted 48kHz but it wasn't reliable.)

    • @video99couk
      @video99couk 6 лет назад +23

      CD mastering was usually done on studio Umatic tapes using the PCM1610/1630 format. Beta later had the PCM-F1 format which was used more as a backup and transport medium than for CD mastering. VHS was rubbish so was rarely used for digital audio except for some very low volume designs. See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PCM_adaptor

    • @paianis
      @paianis 6 лет назад +6

      S-VHS was used for the ADAT system.

    • @markpenrice6253
      @markpenrice6253 6 лет назад +10

      Actually audio CD - and the raw data on a CDROM including the copious second layer of error correction code - is rather higher rate than that, at 1411kbit/s or approx 173kb/s. 44100hz sampling, in stereo (so x2) and 16-bit resolution (so 2 bytes per sample per channel) = 176400 bytes per second. The rate on the disc itself is slightly higher still as there are various additional subchannels, but those are usually added in by the mastering hardware alongside what's coming off the master tape holding the audio proper.
      What we're seeing here, however, is indeed probably equivalent to the situation of audio CD vs CDROM. You could afford to have the occasional small dropout in your audio master, notwithstanding that the quality of both the tapes and the recording & playback hardware would have been a touch above typical consumer equipment (what they mainly wished to avoid was the R&D cost... VHS fit the bill just nicely and had already been developed to maturity, they just had to build *good* VHS decks and tapes). For data, you absolutely cannot allow any non-correctable errors, thus you shove in as much EC as is needed to guarantee that, and then a little bit extra for safety. So a 2352 byte audio sector (2552 byte including subcode, IIRC) becomes a 2048 byte data sector, and in fact "Packet CD" type CDRWs hold even less as each sector also has to include a bunch of sync data.
      The Backer software could adapt the output signal to have quite a range of output densities and thus transfer speeds, between variable pixel clocks, line widths, lines per frame, amount of repeats, and how much detection/correction code was added, but it kinda makes sense that its defaults, at least, would end up sort of aping that of CDROM. Early CDs probably weren't materially much better than VHS in terms of how many dropouts you might get from even a pressed disc, so with an overall recording frame set to be about the same as audio CD, and the error protection set to be about the same proportion as CDROM... voila, 150kb/s. Though I do doubt it's *exactly* the same. Merely close enough for the similarity to jump out at the pattern-and-connection-obsessed human mind.
      FWIW, there seem to have been two variants of the VHS based system, one of which ran slightly slower at approx 44056hz (which was just written at the same old 44100 at mastering time, with the assumption that no-one would notice the 0.1% speedup)... which was basically for compatibility with cheaper setups that were literally just a consumer or at least prosumer grade VCR plus a Backer-type device... namely, an *NTSC* con/prosumer deck, and thus one that was made to fit the *colour* NTSC standard, so running at 59.94 fields/sec instead of 60.00... With all else being equal, and the system otherwise adapting the CD audio signal to fit 60 fields of 240 lines instead of 50 fields of 288 lines per second (or whatever the cross-compatible rate actually was - there's a Wikipedia page somewhere that has the detailed spec, all I can remember is that it used the somewhat odd figure of 98 bits per line), 44100 is divided by 1.001, same as everything else with colour NTSC, to give 44056...
      (or was it 44075, with a different number of bits... and that was as close as they could get to 44100? Who knows... it was a lazy bodge, anyway, as a quick bit of Windows Calculator work shows all they really needed to do was shove in an extra line every 4 or 5th field, which should have been easy to keep track of and well within the capability of the NTSC VHS system (which would have recorded at least 241.5, maybe 243 lines per field), not to mention any electronic device sophisticated enough to convert a 1.411mbit/s bitstream to or from 44.1khz analogue stereo audio... eh...)

    • @video99couk
      @video99couk 6 лет назад +4

      Well yes, I actually have a Alesis deck here, but that was an 8-track studio format like DTRS (I have those too), it wasn't really used for CD mastering directly.

    • @greggv8
      @greggv8 5 лет назад +5

      It wasn't the reliability, it was just how much data would fit per PAL video frame on the U-Matic tapes. Despite NTSC having a higher frame rate having 100 fewer lines per frame made it only capable of a 44.056 Khz rate while PAL just happened to come out at a nice even 44.100 Khz. Any other reason ever said for why CD audio is 44.1 Khz instead of 48 Khz is BS. Had things been different like NTSC working out to 42Khz and PAL 42.352 Khz they would've chosen NTSC because the number of samples would be easier to work with despite there being a very slight reduction in ultimate audio fidelity.

  • @DoodiePunk
    @DoodiePunk Год назад +2

    You're the only one who's ever mentioned backing up systems on VHS from all RUclips geeks. Thank you! 💖

  • @WS-gw5ms
    @WS-gw5ms 7 лет назад +297

    Did you say 3GB in 1996 on a VHS tape? Why wasn't this more popular?

    • @truxton701
      @truxton701 7 лет назад +101

      Maybe the unreliablity

    • @Sheepy007
      @Sheepy007 7 лет назад +39

      Wilson Solt stuff like that and Tape in General is only worthwhile for backing Up stuff, Not normal Data usage. It's very slow and often unreliable in it's mechanism. Also Back then the average User had No real need for large backups.

    • @TheBrokenLife
      @TheBrokenLife 7 лет назад +43

      As far as I can tell, it just was poorly advertised. I would have absolutely bought one had I know about them. I was busy saving up the $400 for a CD-R at that time instead.

    • @ikmalizzatjohari6475
      @ikmalizzatjohari6475 7 лет назад +1

      no audio maybe?

    • @ikmalizzatjohari6475
      @ikmalizzatjohari6475 7 лет назад

      then again you can backup stuffs other than videos

  • @MKlefi
    @MKlefi 7 лет назад +45

    Actually you could put a full DVD movie on that with a better quality then the VHS movie itself could ever been. Just that fact sounds very funny to me :D
    Thx for the nice vid ;)

    • @IrenMasot
      @IrenMasot 5 лет назад +13

      This concept is actually melting my brain, just a little. Only issue is that you can't draw the video file in real time, like you could with a VHS movie. Just need to spend five and a half hours transferring an iso file from your VCR to your computer. :^)

    • @HP-pg5vg
      @HP-pg5vg 4 года назад +5

      IrenMasot
      There's a thing called D-Theatre, it had hd video on vhs. So it is possible.

    • @justanotheryoutubechannel
      @justanotheryoutubechannel 4 года назад +2

      PiersyPiersy It is possible, but not with the hardware used by the Danmere Backer, and also not with a normal home VCR, you’d need a D-VHS machine with special hardware and S-VHS/D-VHS/W-VHS tapes.

    • @plivajucipauk7742
      @plivajucipauk7742 4 года назад

      @@HP-pg5vg D-Theatre is not on your regular VHS, its like saying you can have HD movies on CD because Blu Ray exists.

    • @HP-pg5vg
      @HP-pg5vg 4 года назад

      Well yes, you can't play a d-theatre tape on a regular vcr, but it is still the same exact media.

  • @vink6163
    @vink6163 6 лет назад +273

    * Shows ISA card with the jumpers clearly set to DMA3 *
    * Proceeds to uninstall sound card because it uses DMA1 *
    :-P

    • @michalnemecek3575
      @michalnemecek3575 5 лет назад +32

      I'm watching at 360p on an old Win XP netbook, so I can't even see the jumper settings.

    • @aretard7995
      @aretard7995 4 года назад +1

      cool

    • @messagedeleted1922
      @messagedeleted1922 4 года назад +10

      Dma Adress stuff suuuuucked.

    • @aidancommenting
      @aidancommenting 4 года назад +6

      @@michalnemecek3575 You can watch RUclips on a Windows XP netbook? At 360p?
      Is it Internet Explorer?

    • @michalnemecek3575
      @michalnemecek3575 4 года назад +5

      @@aidancommenting No, it's an old version of Firefox ESR

  • @TwoCentReview
    @TwoCentReview 6 лет назад +7

    6:00 Hearing him say, "Isn't that delightful?" is so delightful in of itself.

  • @sihy
    @sihy 7 лет назад +71

    Argh! DMA conflicts! That brings back awful memories.

    • @billant2
      @billant2 6 лет назад +4

      DMA no - MDMA yess!! :)

    • @joe--cool
      @joe--cool 4 года назад

      Ah I don''t need to print while gaming. This DMA and IRQ is fine.
      - Printing page 55
      - Windows: "DING!"
      - dammit

    • @666Tomato666
      @666Tomato666 4 года назад

      IRQ conflicts were always worse for me

  • @BoyAditya
    @BoyAditya 7 лет назад +170

    Wow .. this could be fun for spy movie stuff... Imagine there's a movie where someone bought VHS and they thought they bought old movies but there's goverments secret files ... 😋

    • @480JD
      @480JD 4 года назад +17

      I know its a 2 year old reply... But there was a Disney movie of the week called Cloak and Dagger where they did that on a video game cartridge.

    • @aidancommenting
      @aidancommenting 4 года назад +1

      @@480JD Cloak and Dagger is a series though..?

    • @480JD
      @480JD 4 года назад +7

      @@aidancommenting this was like back in the 80's, it was just a 2 hour standalone movie, there are some clips of it on youtube.

    • @edwarddeguzman3258
      @edwarddeguzman3258 2 года назад +4

      The Movie Cloak and Dagger was based in small part off the Atari video game and starred Dabney Coleman and it was about spies using the cart to transport secrets while the TV Cloak and Dagger was based off Marvel Comics of the same title. EDIT and Cloak and Dagger movie was a full on theatrical release that made about 9million

    • @jimmydandy9364
      @jimmydandy9364 2 года назад

      LOL - yeah hopefully there was some sort of encryption :P

  • @DecentFarts
    @DecentFarts 7 лет назад +6

    You loading the VCR while waiting for the install to load. That was immersive. The shots and editing of this video are amazing. Keep up the good work.

  • @MichaelMichael-kv4gp
    @MichaelMichael-kv4gp 2 года назад +4

    Hey LGR, as of 5 years later this EXACT head cleaner is still at best buy! Just picked it up today :)

  • @AmyraCarter
    @AmyraCarter 7 лет назад +18

    Ah yes, good ol' VHS...I remember running into a few of these kinds of tapes that had a bunch of distortion, and now I know that what my then friend threw away was likely his dad's Windows Backup files.

  • @Ray2Jerry
    @Ray2Jerry 6 лет назад +26

    I can remember spending hours messing with DMA and I/O settings, drivers, ini, etc in old Windows. Let's all stop and give thanks to our Lord and Savior, The USB Standard lol

  • @BlameThande
    @BlameThande 5 лет назад +4

    Thanks for making this video, I remember seeing the Backer (the later 4 GB version) in UK computer magazines at the time and being fascinated by it. I remember being surprised (thinking only of home machines not industry) that anyone could possibly need to back up that much data, given my computer's hard drive at the time was only a half a gigabyte and the Iomega Jaz drive, the biggest zip-type device, only used 1 GB disks.

  • @dustintravis8791
    @dustintravis8791 4 года назад +3

    OMG. I just saw Kai's Power Goo in your folder list, I had COMPLETELY forgotten about that image manipulation software! I also "borrowed" Bryce 3D back in the day as well. Man the nostalgia in this clip is strong for me, THANK YOU for this episode!!!

  • @itsgruz
    @itsgruz 7 лет назад +8

    I've had the Danmere and the ArVid on my ebay followed searches for ages out of pure curiosity. Great to finally see one of these VHS backup cards in action!

    • @Wflash00
      @Wflash00 5 лет назад +1

      Yo Killgruz!!! Quit watching LGR and make more Super Mario Game Genie videos

  • @Freako
    @Freako 7 лет назад +114

    I think VHS stuff has got to be my favourite asthetic.
    Good stuff, Clint.

    • @JRSanchez93
      @JRSanchez93 7 лет назад +3

      Freako Last time I saw anything of yours, you still had a fry looking avatar.

    • @blazebuscus9894
      @blazebuscus9894 7 лет назад +2

      So happy to see you here off all places.

    • @beakmann
      @beakmann 7 лет назад +8

      Clint's early videos used to be recorded on tape!

    • @AmaroqStarwind
      @AmaroqStarwind 7 лет назад +1

      Freako I want a proper VCR add-on for my desktop PC.

  • @haratofu
    @haratofu 6 лет назад +1

    I shouldn't be surprised, but I just love the implication that you have multiple favorite VCR's.

  • @ivanmedvedev1385
    @ivanmedvedev1385 4 года назад +1

    ARVID had a cool feature, it had a IR emitter which could be trained to emit remote commands, it had to be taped against the IR sensor on the VHS. That made the system completely hands free. The software would even find your data on the tape automatically.

  • @wilymcgee
    @wilymcgee 7 лет назад +32

    love the transition @0:30

    • @claudiolluberes111
      @claudiolluberes111 7 лет назад +2

      13:47 too, it fitted pretty great!

    • @Kylefassbinderful
      @Kylefassbinderful 7 лет назад +1

      I like how you're the only one who really noticed. I also thought it was a nice touch.

  • @5HlNOBI
    @5HlNOBI 7 лет назад +9

    VBS for Amiga - I used routinely, was very reliable even in 6-8hr(EP/SLP) mode. The binary signal had redundancy routines in the way it played and recorded which took into account parts of the tape that might have a defect or tracking problem, then the file would be recoverable on a succeeding part of the back up. I lost almost no data even with crappy, re-used tapes. It restored disasters for me a couple of times.

  • @GammaCatch
    @GammaCatch 7 лет назад +4

    Imagine having all your gamesaves backed up to one of those. I LOVE being able to see the data on video. WOW

    • @lilpiggygoestomarket
      @lilpiggygoestomarket 4 года назад

      Hold on. Just need to load my SimCity save off this video tape. *Failed* shit!!!!

  • @Campingrobot
    @Campingrobot 7 лет назад +1

    That last bit, about using the card and software to backup to other media than VHS; that sounds exactly like what I'd be planning next, if I had anything to say in that matter :3

  • @The-Bloke
    @The-Bloke 7 лет назад +32

    Maybe shell.dll failed because it was an open and locked system file? If so the software really should have detected that and showed that it "failed to back up this file", but it's possible they didn't bother looking for that and therefore that it was unable to read the file to back it up (because the file was locked by Windows) and thus the on-tape version could never match the on-disk version. If that happened and if we could see file sizes of the on-tape versions, we might have seen that shell.dll was 0 bytes.

  • @Darkfalz79
    @Darkfalz79 7 лет назад +6

    Before CD burners and mp3 I recorded a bunch of CDs to the Hifi portion of VHS because it was, at the time, the highest fidelity you could do cheaply.

  • @Wedeemgaming
    @Wedeemgaming 4 года назад

    Still kind of cool to see files being backed up on a VHS... Funny thing is I would have never thought that was a thing but of course it is, the video data gets on there so why not other types of data! Interesting video!

  • @elky210
    @elky210 7 лет назад +13

    Putting the tape into the VCR made me smile, memories I suppose.

    • @kaydwessie296
      @kaydwessie296 6 лет назад +3

      The best noises

    • @billant2
      @billant2 6 лет назад +2

      Except when the tape got stuck ;)
      It Danmere (read: damn near) sucks! lol

    • @andriealinsangao613
      @andriealinsangao613 5 лет назад +1

      @@billant2 Get outta here!! 😂😂

  • @NihilQuest
    @NihilQuest 7 лет назад +90

    I never knew there were 6 and 8 hour VHS tapes. I remember only tapes that were good for two movies at best.

    • @TheBrokenLife
      @TheBrokenLife 7 лет назад +11

      6 hour was pretty much the standard as I recall. I routinely had 3 movies on a tape. The would have been SLP recordings though.

    • @robmilsom
      @robmilsom 7 лет назад +6

      Or one movie if it’s Lawrence of Arabia XD

    • @Zizzily
      @Zizzily 7 лет назад +20

      A T-120 tape is 2 hours in SP mode, 4 hours in LP mode and 6 hours in SLP/EP mode, but the quality goes down as well, obviously. I think the longest that was usually available was T-240, which would be 4 hours in SP, 6 hours in LP, and 8 hours in SLP/EP.

    • @gabrieleriva651
      @gabrieleriva651 7 лет назад +6

      Nihil Quest I had the entirety of Dragon Ball GT on two VHS. Ah, the bootleggery of late 90s!

    • @elitheothercomputerguy5436
      @elitheothercomputerguy5436 7 лет назад +1

      Zzyzx Wolfe I remember the longest tape you can get at somepoint was 12 hours

  • @VHSHunter
    @VHSHunter 7 лет назад +3

    That VHS player looks amazing! Thanks for making the video I feel like a complete geek but was thoroughly enjoyable.

  • @BrolyTheLSS2
    @BrolyTheLSS2 2 года назад +1

    Out of everything I have seen since episode 1 of LGR and I am currently on this one. This episode is the most fascinating thing I’ve ever seen. Thanks Clint.

  • @simonsansome4100
    @simonsansome4100 6 лет назад +1

    Oh my goodness!!! Those VU meters remind of a time in my life when I threw caution to the wind and smoked copius amounts of weed (I was a teenager and it was the early 80's!)
    Anywho - Me and my mate would get off our faces whilst listening to Hi-Nrg (anyone remember Divine?) blasting out of his music system. The thing was that after a certain amount of the wacki-backi I would begin to stare at the flashing VU meters!! I remember it being a very pleasent experience at the time!!!
    Of course now I am not promoting the use of the Ganja as it may be against the law in your area (I'm in the UK and it is very much against the law!) It has been years since I have partook - but the VU's on your video took me back to a happy time in my life!
    Thanks LGR - you're a Great Bloke!

  • @dingo137
    @dingo137 7 лет назад +6

    I bought one of those back in the day when they were first released. CDR drives were still very expensive, whereas this thing was only about £35. However, moving the VCR when I wanted to use it was a bit of a hassle, and if backing up is inconvenient you tend not to do it.
    That 9 MB/minute was assuming 2:1 compression IIRC. The entire thing ran well below the theoretical capability of a VHS tape. They could have probably got 3 to 4 times the speed & storage capacity out of it without anything too outrageous, but I guess cost and the practicalities of running error correction powerful enough to handle faster rates on the PCs of the day was a limit.
    I got strangely obsessed by this and found a webpage by the person who wrote Linux drivers for the Backer. Apparently SLP mode has a much higher error rate, and he needed to put in an second layer of strong Reed-Solomon error correction to get it to work reliably. Danmere's software probably just had one fairly weak layer, hence the failure on a file in your test. I only ever used SP mode with mine, and don't remember having problems but luckily I never had a need to do a restore for real.

  • @GameHammerCG
    @GameHammerCG 7 лет назад +6

    Installs 90s hardware
    Has DMA problems.
    Yup, that's the Nineties.

  • @wisteela
    @wisteela 7 лет назад +13

    Greetings from England. I have the later external model which I've never used, but they do indeed work with Betamax.

  • @thejewcanoe1
    @thejewcanoe1 6 лет назад +1

    Man you are are doing a seriously great service!
    Love the videos.
    Keep up the good work.
    I love the nostalgia!

  • @edwardbell8771
    @edwardbell8771 7 лет назад +230

    I need this in my life I'm stuck in the 90s right now

    • @assigdcbbddoknbfrghjh985
      @assigdcbbddoknbfrghjh985 7 лет назад +4

      LOL 👍

    • @kanyegaming5296
      @kanyegaming5296 7 лет назад +6

      Edward Bell Okay, but don’t touch my N64! 😡

    • @ConnorTerrell
      @ConnorTerrell 7 лет назад +7

      Edward Bell I'm stuck in the 60s/70s. lol

    • @BarManFesteiro
      @BarManFesteiro 7 лет назад +23

      you was trying to find any excuse to tell everyone that you have a Nintendo 64 dont you?

    • @Trashboat4444
      @Trashboat4444 7 лет назад +4

      Edward Bell im stuck in the 2010s

  • @5speedfatty
    @5speedfatty 7 лет назад +7

    SEND THIS TO ODDITY ARCHIVE!!!!! Ol' Benny Boy has a whole rig's worth of things that could test this!!!

  • @silverspoongaming6997
    @silverspoongaming6997 7 лет назад +1

    Great video LGR! I was dying to see what it looked like playing on a tv.

  • @Aaron48219
    @Aaron48219 5 лет назад

    I remember these. And back in the 90's, as a 14yo kid, making 6 hour long audio mixtapes on VHS T-120's at EP/SLP, because the audio wasn't affected as much by the longer play/record setting. My mother worked for a manufacturer, and there was an abundance of free T-120's in our house. I taped over the broken off "write protect" tabs more than I count. I also tried running video into a cassette tape when I was about 12/13...futile.
    I also remember during the same age, "How cool would it be if you could put an entire audio CD on a 3.5in floppy!" The next month, I see my new, monthly edition, to my subscription of Stereo Review magazine's cover, "Sony's New MiniDisc!" My heart sank knowing what I thought was a new idea, was already in the hands of the CD Audio giant. *Shakes fist at Sony*

  • @neverthere5689
    @neverthere5689 7 лет назад +4

    i work in backups, I sell backup software and this cracked me up. Sometimes i get on a call with a customer and they are still using Server 2003 or even Windows 98. It wouldnt surprise me to get on a call and a crazy customer was trying to use this.

  • @CiscoWes
    @CiscoWes 4 года назад +13

    Sounds like you're saying "damn-near" as in, "I damn near backed up my whole hard drive"

  • @jockinafrock
    @jockinafrock 7 лет назад +1

    I was heavily into the Amiga pirate scene in the early '90s and for a while we were receiving a weekly dump of new pirated releases via this system. My friend bought a high end VCR just to ensure we could read these tapes. We quickly moved on to Iomega Zip disks due to their better performance and convenience.

  • @ClownNaround
    @ClownNaround 5 лет назад +1

    Honestly I LOVE this new intro music. PLEASE for all that is holy keep using this music.

  • @SatellaNNW
    @SatellaNNW 5 лет назад +6

    9:27 I can imagine it. That old-new cassette smell... 👍🏼

  • @nullcircuit
    @nullcircuit 7 лет назад +3

    I kept hearing "Damn near Backup".

  • @coltonbucholz6278
    @coltonbucholz6278 3 года назад

    Best part of these vids is they never become obsolete... because they were when the vid was made.

  • @member57
    @member57 5 лет назад

    A client in a small town in Texas that had a VHS backup. It was set up by a local. This was around 2004 I think. They had been using the same tape for years. Needless to say when the computer crapped out, the backup was useless. I had to extract the platters from the HD and install in an identical drive to get their data. Lucky for that business it worked. Expensive but worked. Set them up with a RAID array and a quality tape backup.

  • @justanotheryoutubechannel
    @justanotheryoutubechannel 5 лет назад +4

    Oh man, those unopened 6 & 8 hour VHS tapes are really sexy holy crap. I love them! I wish I still had my collection of tapes from when I was a kid!

  • @JohnGabrielUk
    @JohnGabrielUk 7 лет назад +8

    Best. Transitions. Ever.

  • @bigbro5793
    @bigbro5793 7 лет назад +1

    Yeah, I did enjoy what I saw! Thank you.
    So now you can digitize your VHS rarities and "backup-up" them on VHS again))).

  • @PossumMedic
    @PossumMedic 4 года назад

    Lmfao omg from the thumb nail I definitely thought this was for backing up VHS tapes onto your hard drive not your hard drive onto VHS tapes! xD
    Thanks for another great vid! :D

  • @axa993
    @axa993 7 лет назад +22

    Hahahaha that Transcom advertisement in Serbian. Yugoslavia truly was a nest of piracy!
    Kao što kaže na dnu: kvalitet- ponos - tradicija :D

    • @billant2
      @billant2 6 лет назад

      Forget about pornos, get a tape full of cracked warez!! lol

    • @mikipank
      @mikipank 5 лет назад

      Jos sredinom 80ih sam narucivao kasete sa igricama od njih, za Atari 800 xl. Kasnije i nekoliko za Commodore 64, ali secam se da su bile jako loseg kvaliteta, verovatno presnimavane na kasetofonima sa dve glave. Sa nekih nije mogao da se ucita program za stelovanje glave kasetofona a kamoli igrica. Kao sto kazes bivsa Juga je bila meka za kompjutersku pirateriju.

  • @yushatak
    @yushatak 7 лет назад +14

    Hook up DVD recorder like a VHS/DVD hybrid, and then you could write to a DVD-R or DVD-RW on a machine that has no idea what IDE even is, much less a DVD, and it would work. That's an interesting idea. If I get one of these I'll be trying that - dunno how hard they are to find, though.

    • @dingo137
      @dingo137 7 лет назад +6

      Yushatak Unlikely to work - the MPEG compression on video DVDs is designed for use with realistic video. It'll probably fail horribly on essentially "random" pictures like this. Would be interesting to try though.

    • @yushatak
      @yushatak 7 лет назад +1

      That is a good point, but if there's a way to control the "resolution" of the data so that the "pixels" of the backup become larger it might still work. Depends on exactly how the decoder is written. Anyway it's clearly just an exercise in curiosity to try it - if I really needed to back up to a DVD I'd just plug a drive in externally or internally and write software if necessary, lol.

    • @markpenrice6253
      @markpenrice6253 6 лет назад +5

      Well, there is, but not in any meaningful way on a home deck. Because essentially you'd have to capture it as raw video to some other computer and encode it to a different video format before saving it to DVDR.
      DVD video itself is pretty limited. You've got a choice of 352, 704 or 720 pixels across, and either 480 or 576 vertical pixels recorded as an interlaced stream of 240/288 line fields (or with 352, you can also have 240 or 288 progressive... essentially just cramming everything into a single field then pausing everything for a field's duration), with a data rate somewhere between about 1mbit/s (a little less than that used for MPG1 VCD, taking advantage of the increased efficiency of MPG2) and no more than 10mbit/s including the audio.
      Now, if there's some way you could cajole the recorder into making an "i-frame only" stream (which is essentially MJPEG), instead of using any of the motion-compensation and prediction algorithms, and you recorded at 352x480 or 352x576, with the (near-)maximum data rate (which would fill the disc in just over an hour... in fact, *absolute* maximum DVD video rate on a regular 4.3-metric-Gb disc ends up storing *exactly* the minimum amount needed for a film to class as a "feature" rather than a "short", 55 minutes... but normally the max is pegged a little lower-rate, at "1 hour", usually 60 minutes and a few seconds, for convenience), and also in monochrome rather than colour, with the minimum allowable audio quality, I figure you could probably record Backer data just fine. Each horizontal pixel would cover roughly 2 DVD pixels, and the contrast would be enough that even with each horizontal line changing almost completely it should record each seeming 4x8 pattern accurately.
      It'd be dreadfully inefficient, but it should work. I can't say however that I know of any consumer DVD recorders that can pull off any of those tricks; for starters, you're very much locked into the standard "GOP" for key and deltaframe encoding, which is IBBPBBPBBPBBPBB (I=fully encoded keyframe, P=high quality motion/difference encoding delta frame, B="bidirectional", low quality, mostly motion-encoding delta frame) and is essentially one of the main reasons MPEG is at all able to provide acceptable quality video at a practical bitrate, and would also be the reason that the encoder would go *utterly apeshit* when faced with what looks like high contract but oddly low frequency static. It'll be hunting like crazy for all the differences and movements it thinks might be hiding in that signal, and doing a really bad job of it... *any* MPEG encoder will do badly here, but your DVD recorder will be double bad as it'll be encoding in realtime (a desktop converter might be able to spend several seconds on a particularly difficult successive set of odd or even fields; a realtime consumer chip gets 1/50th or 1/60th of a second and not a jot more), and will likely be using hardware built down to a price with software that was baked into a ROM chip, or a custom DSP, many, many years ago, rather than being relatively up-to-date desktop software.
      On top of which, your choice of encoding rates will be limited and closely tied to the resolution (HQ, SP, and probably whatever the medium-length option is will be 720x480/576, LP will be 352x480/576, and super-long-play will be 352x240/288, with the rate being fixed at some constant determined by the advertised recording length of each mode on a standard 4.3Gb disc - so typically 1, 2, maybe 3, 4, 6 and maybe 8 hours), most particularly you aren't going to get 352x480/576 at maximum rate. 720 might be an acceptable substitute however. Also, colour will be locked in as the encoding mode even if the material is completely monochrome, and you won't be able to do anything about the audio, which on most home DVD recorders is locked at 256kbit AC3 regardless of the video mode, eating up more than a fifth of the entire Backer data rate doing nothing at all.
      Of course, even if you somehow managed to record a data pattern out from the source system that the MPEG encoder was entirely happy with, and was able to save to disc with no corruption at all in 352x480/576 mode at its locked-out 1/3 to 1/6 of maximum bitrate, you'd be wasting bits, because of the audio and because even the lowest available rate on any typical recorder would be about 150kbyte/sec itself if not a little higher (VCD was about 172kbyte/sec including video, audio and control track, with just a tiny bit more EC than audio CD). But that's the best case scenario - a much more realistic one would be wasting a *huge* amount of data in order to save into that form.
      I'd suggest a much more practical solution, if you had many tens or hundreds of megs to get out of some other system where your only other practical option is the floppy drive, would be to get hold of another Backer, or an internal (not USB!) capture card which could then either record raw uncompressed video or pass the data to some custom made bit of software that could do the job of the Backer hardware, and bypass the DVD part altogether.
      Or just hook up a serial cable between them and accept that it might take a few hours. It'll still be quicker than all the fannying around trying to get the data out this way. And then you can save it to CDROM, or DVDROM, or a memory stick, memory card, hard drive.... basically anything is a more secure way of saving it than on video DVD in fact. Video DVDs are horrible, nasty, unreliable pieces of shit. Even VHS itself is a better choice...

    • @kaydwessie296
      @kaydwessie296 6 лет назад

      I like this idea, I have a combo VHS and DVD player in my room still! :D
      Someone tell me if it works

  • @bubrockit
    @bubrockit 5 лет назад

    OMG. I've been watching this channel for MONTHS when I go to sleep to help me sleep and it's worked amazingly. I love the retro stuff you review and really enjoy seeing all the weird tech from that era. Today I realized that you're most likely an Energy Vampire, the most common kind of vampire.

  • @dougsisk619
    @dougsisk619 4 года назад

    I find your troubleshooting success very satisfying. Never give up!

  • @BinBintheRiceCake
    @BinBintheRiceCake 7 лет назад +6

    6:03
    That is one satisfying click if you ask me.

  • @IkeFoxbrush
    @IkeFoxbrush 7 лет назад +3

    Ha, this video is a good reminder why Plug&Play extension cards where also referred to as "Plug&Pray". Just plug it into your computer and pray it works ^_^

    • @LGR
      @LGR  7 лет назад +1

      No kidding! Although this wasn't even a P&P card in this case, so it was even worse :)

  • @craigh5236
    @craigh5236 4 года назад +1

    I remember back in the Amiga days a friend had vcr backup system. It was a device that allowed you to use a normal vcr machine to store data on.

  • @Bishka100
    @Bishka100 5 лет назад +1

    You know what would be better than VHS.... Backing-up to vinyl. Using cassette back-up with a record lathe and turntable :-)

  • @Bloodgaze
    @Bloodgaze 7 лет назад +67

    You are visitor number : err2

    • @cavalen
      @cavalen 7 лет назад +7

      MissingNo (?)

    • @komodo_dgn
      @komodo_dgn 7 лет назад

      I am visitor -7.55E-4.

  • @FalconFour
    @FalconFour 7 лет назад +42

    Okay, just set my mind at ease here, please. Did you ever realize the VCR was set to SLP (EP) mode? Come on, man... ;) That's why your backup crapped the bed. Run it in SP and let's see a do-over!

    • @horrortimeproductions5504
      @horrortimeproductions5504 5 лет назад +6

      I always have my old VCR set to SP, as I never liked or ever got a decent video with SLP. It's better to buy longer tapes than switch to a slower speed, if you really needed more than 2 hours. I often use T-160 tapes, as you get an extra 40 minutes to that 2 hours. I don't suggest any tapes above T-160, as the film gets thinner and unreliable.

    • @brucewrigleysgumchewz4667
      @brucewrigleysgumchewz4667 5 лет назад +4

      Hell, T160's had a tendency to break (just like how those 100min high bias audio cassettes were. I HATED trying to repair those! With video, I always stuck with 120's. Way back then (in the 90's), I mostly recorded in EP (SLP) mode. But it was mostly video games lol. Except when we rented a video camera. That was in SP.
      I swear, no idea why I recorded all those stupid games. lmao.

    • @horrortimeproductions5504
      @horrortimeproductions5504 5 лет назад +1

      I just recorded MTV and other old stuff that isn't really around nowadays. The reason why I mentioned T-160 as being an option, is because if a show exceeds over the 2 hour limit, it would be okay. I had a VCR that was picky about tapes in the SLP mode, it would constantly change playback speeds. It's too bad there was no switch or button that controlled it manually, or it wouldn't of been a problem. So I had to use SP all the time, which I would reuse tapes that didn't have anything worth keeping. The VCR kept going up until 2007, when a simple head cleaning wasn't enough, a fuse popped. It wasn't a huge problem finding another VCR, as long it would play my old tapes. I make sure I use my stuff until it completely breaks, I wasn't really poor but just didn't replace things until I needed to. Lol

    • @markpenrice6253
      @markpenrice6253 4 года назад

      I dunno about EP / SLP, but I did enough backups in LP mode on E300 (5-hour) tapes using the device. Just have to use slightly more conservative settings for safety, but that lets you fit a 4~5GB dataset (most of a 3.2 and a 1.something GB hard drive... or possibly the non-reinstallable data from a larger pair... it's been 20+ years, I can't remember so clearly) onto a single tape whilst running it overnight and not having to mess with it or have it interfere with daytime use of the machine.
      (yay for more efficient PAL encoding which let us run the tape slower... E300 is probably equivalent to T180 or something, and LP is hard to tell apart from SP, unlike the degradation of EP recording...)
      With shorter tapes in SP you could turn the encoding rate up somewhat. Dunno if I made it as high as 300KB/s, but certainly 180~200 was easily possible, maybe low 200s, which when your only alternatives were floppies, or Zipdisks that ran at a similar speed but cost quite a lot of money for just 95MB of usable space, seemed pretty good. Especially as you could get the equivalent of two 10-packs of Zips (which would cost more than the Danmere, maybe even that plus a cheap VCR, all by themselves, never mind buying the drive) onto a cheap and actually less bulky 3-hour (or 3h15) cassette.

    • @KuraIthys
      @KuraIthys 4 года назад

      @@horrortimeproductions5504 I had no real complaints with recording for 8 hours on a 4 hour tape.
      Though that's with late 90's PAL machines, and I've heard PAL in general had different quality implications than an NTSC machine. (Also innately longer recording times for a given length of tape for some reason. Hence the 4 hour tapes. E-240 or something...)
      I still have most of these tapes and they still work, so I don't know what to say in that regard... XD

  • @paulkocyla1343
    @paulkocyla1343 4 года назад +1

    Unpacking tape: "Hmm, it smells fresh." One second earlier, I already had this smell in my nose - wonderful flashback, thanx for that :-D
    I´m wondering why this wasn´t so known in Germany, and believe me, I knew all of the stuff being there, cause I was a freakin´ nerd, scanners, ZIPs, tape storages, image capturing ISA cards, whatever. I wrote software rendering 3D engines, hacking phone lines and hacking software etc.
    I heard about VHS storage at that time only available for AMIGA, but it was nowhere to buy, and no reports in most common magazines ever in Germany, what a pity.

    • @inkshop963
      @inkshop963 4 года назад

      Hi Paul, I worked for a German tape company, and we did the same thing on a Phillip's 2000 system. It worked well, we tried to sell it to a few data companies, but they weren't interested. Funny thing, technically the eight hour tape was better than the six hour tape. It had better tape to head adhesion, and contra intuitively, it had a higher tensile strength. better sheer strength and adhesion of the media. Worked for a Japanese company where they discovered the nine hour tape was even better. All dated and little used technology today. Fortunately. the VHS, the 386, Windows 3.1 and I are retired now.

  • @everydaychris5597
    @everydaychris5597 6 лет назад +1

    I’m actually pretty happy that I’m not the only one who smells a fresh video tape, after it’s first opened. It’s actually pretty amazing.

    • @winterwatson6811
      @winterwatson6811 2 года назад +1

      * likely pseudoscience ahead *
      Smell is said to be the sense most closely related to memory and emotion. Smell on!

  • @GrueTurtle
    @GrueTurtle Год назад +3

    Technology connections sent us

  • @mooniejohnson
    @mooniejohnson 7 лет назад +6

    The takeaway from this? _Woodgrain fixes all problems._

  • @HumbleHonkingEnthusiast
    @HumbleHonkingEnthusiast 7 лет назад +1

    I appreciate your slick editing

  • @FFXIvoorhees
    @FFXIvoorhees 6 лет назад

    So glad you plugged it into a TV.

  • @izzard
    @izzard 7 лет назад +3

    I remember this being advertised heavily in magazines.

  • @GreatBigRanz
    @GreatBigRanz 7 лет назад +5

    Tape might be coming back, one company created a tape that can hold 330 Terabits

  • @physalis17
    @physalis17 6 лет назад

    That is the the oddest thing I have seen you post man. It just blows my mind!

  • @cargo_vroom9729
    @cargo_vroom9729 5 лет назад

    It's funny that now backing up VHS tapes onto a hard drive seems like the much more sensible idea.

  • @Fender178
    @Fender178 7 лет назад +5

    Maybe if this was released in the mid to late 1980s then it may have caught on considering CD-ROMs weren't a thing on PCs yet and hard drives were pretty tiny.

    • @brthrhell1
      @brthrhell1 4 года назад

      I think it would be a bit revolutionary, considering on my Atari 800xl with the 1050 drive you could only store about 254kb per disc if using both sides. A 2GB tape would store 7800 disc.

  • @andrewsmyname
    @andrewsmyname 7 лет назад +6

    English viewer: just here to express sense of pride :P

  • @krisvantuerenhout537
    @krisvantuerenhout537 6 лет назад +1

    I used an Amiga version back in the day. Worked perfectly in all record modes. While backing up or restoring you saw the zebra stripes on your screen.. 😊👍

  • @GrahamToal
    @GrahamToal 4 года назад

    I actually invented this technique around 1982 (+/- 1 yr) while working at Acorn in the UK. I was working on the software for a Teletext receiver and realised that the Mullard SAA5030 chip for decoding off-air teletext signals could be used to encode them as well and write to a VCR, using all 625 scanlines rather than just the dozen or so normally reserved for teletext rows. An engineer who had just been hired at Acorn, Martin Gilbert, was given the hardware implementation to do as a test job to get him warmed up to working at Acorn, and Hugo Tyson who wrote several of the Acorn filing systems wrote the software for it. It was built and worked, but never taken to market. I had not heard of this later PC implementation until just now!

    • @GrahamToal
      @GrahamToal 4 года назад

      PS capacity: 40 bytes per scanline, 625 scanlines per frame, 50 frames per second, 60 seconds per minute, 45 or 90 or 120 minutes per tape... so multiply those together gives you a rough capacity estimate. We didn't use any software compression. This was for the BBC micro; we hadn't designed the ARM at that point. That was about 4Gb raw, but we had 300% redundancy because of the unreliability of VCR tape. Blocks were repeated some distance apart because a typical tape drop-out would remove a large block - traditional redundancy such as hamming code would not have worked as the redundant bits would have been wiped out as well...

    • @dingo137
      @dingo137 4 года назад

      Graham Toal Wouldn't it be only 25 frames per second at 625 lines per frame, thanks to interlacing? I'm impressed you got 40 bytes per scanline though, that would seem to be pretty close to the theoretical limit of VHS. Thinking about it in modern times I'd try Reed Solomon codes for the error correction, with interleaving to spread the bytes in a code block over a large tape area. Too computationally intensive for the 80s though I suspect.