This model was the best you could have at home in the 90s. Because of guilt of my parents, they never let me, not even paying for it with my first job. I had a Panasonic camcorder and I wanted it to edit. I had to settle for a Sony VHS, which had nothing to do with it
My second VCR was one of these beauties. It was bought in late 1993 or early 1994 and I paid nearly £800 for it (£1600 adjusted at time of posting). My friends and family thought I was bonkers paying that much for a video recorder, but it was used daily (and on some days, _very_ heavily) for over a decade and never let me down. The editing features were second to none. Glitch-free frame-accurate insert editing with stereo dubbing was like voodoo. Its only shortcoming was a lack of an ACG option on the audio inputs. There were a few times when I forgot and left the levels too high or too low after using an external source, only to leave my next TV recording with sound that was too quiet or clipped. But that was literally my only complaint. At an ownership cost of about 20p per day over its lifetime, it remains one of the best value items of technology I've ever owned.
Back in the mid-90's I had an editing system that was made up of a Panasonic NV-FS200B and NV-F77B linked with an edit controller that used the 5pin remote sockets to control the 2 machines. The FS200 with it's TBC was the player for stuff shot on my S-VHS camcorder and the F-77 was the editing recorder but it was VHS only.
i had a simular model in the uk, one of the most unreliable machines ive ever had ! my matsui (orion) machine from the early 90s is the only machine that has never needed a repair yet that ive owned
Wasn’t expecting the surrealist element in this video but I’m here for it.
@@extofer thankyou for watching and understanding the vision 😁
My dad had a Panasonic NV-F65. It died a few days ago sadly. Over 30 years service without fault. Amazing machine.
This model was the best you could have at home in the 90s.
Because of guilt of my parents, they never let me, not even paying for it with my first job.
I had a Panasonic camcorder and I wanted it to edit.
I had to settle for a Sony VHS, which had nothing to do with it
Love the magic trick 😮👍
… and the “organ of mass destruction”😂😂
Thanks for watching 👍
O no the infamous G deck
Tell me more ?
My second VCR was one of these beauties. It was bought in late 1993 or early 1994 and I paid nearly £800 for it (£1600 adjusted at time of posting). My friends and family thought I was bonkers paying that much for a video recorder, but it was used daily (and on some days, _very_ heavily) for over a decade and never let me down. The editing features were second to none. Glitch-free frame-accurate insert editing with stereo dubbing was like voodoo.
Its only shortcoming was a lack of an ACG option on the audio inputs. There were a few times when I forgot and left the levels too high or too low after using an external source, only to leave my next TV recording with sound that was too quiet or clipped.
But that was literally my only complaint. At an ownership cost of about 20p per day over its lifetime, it remains one of the best value items of technology I've ever owned.
@@KevReillyUK they were not cheap that’s for sure, I’ve not taken great care of this one but it still works!
Back in the mid-90's I had an editing system that was made up of a Panasonic NV-FS200B and NV-F77B linked with an edit controller that used the 5pin remote sockets to control the 2 machines. The FS200 with it's TBC was the player for stuff shot on my S-VHS camcorder and the F-77 was the editing recorder but it was VHS only.
Sounds a nice setup. Preview, pre-roll, insert or assemble … a lost art 😁
i had a simular model in the uk, one of the most unreliable machines ive ever had ! my matsui (orion) machine from the early 90s is the only machine that has never needed a repair yet that ive owned
I have a panasonic NV-FS 100 still working.
@@vitorcouto3322 nice one, do you use it regularly ?
@@richfish_media yes. I use it to convert s-vhs tapes to digital. I have the original remote control and the code bar reader.
@@vitorcouto3322 was that the barcode reader to programme the timer functions? I seem to remember something along those lines .
@@richfish_media yes. That´s it.
😊 Лайк і підписка!
Sorry I don’t speak your language , but thanks for watching 👍
Slava 🇺🇦
Awesome 👍😎
Thanks for watching 👍
😮😮😮😮😮
The Sony EDV-9000 Blew it away!!