RadioBanter

RadioBanter (https://www.radiobanter.com/)
-   Shortwave (https://www.radiobanter.com/shortwave/)
-   -   VCR sound quality for taping radio broacasts? (https://www.radiobanter.com/shortwave/99920-vcr-sound-quality-taping-radio-broacasts.html)

SeeingEyeDog July 27th 06 09:37 PM

VCR sound quality for taping radio broacasts?
 
The "HiFi" audio in consumer grade HiFi VHS is recorded in Audio Frequency
Modulation (AFM).
Digital audio PCM is only available on high end S-VHS machines.

"Mahmoud Ahmadinejad"
VCR Hi-Fi records/reads audio two ways:

The old analog way with the linear audio track on the long side of the

tape.
This mode is FM and is backward compatable with non-HiFi recorded tapes.

The HiFi audio mode is Pulse Code Modulation. PCM is used to record audio
with the video head but separate from the video. The video head takes a
swipe across the tape. When it reaches near the bottom, it stops recording
video and starts recording DIGITAL audio using the same head.

During playback, the head listens for video sending it to the screen and
when it reaches the end of a swipe, shifts its attention to audio sending
the digits to a circuit that converts the signal back into stereo sound.

If the DIGITAL audio is not present on the tape the HiFi VCR will use the
old analog FM linear audio track instead.

In the 1980s and 1990s, some people used the Hi-Fi tracks on VHS and

BetaMax
VCRs to record audio. This was a stopgap measure while affordable digital
audio was being developed and sounded far better than audio cassettes.




David July 27th 06 10:03 PM

VCR sound quality for taping radio broacasts?
 
On Thu, 27 Jul 2006 14:52:50 -0500, "Mahmoud Ahmadinejad"
wrote:

VCR Hi-Fi records/reads audio two ways:

The old analog way with the linear audio track on the long side of the tape.
This mode is FM and is backward compatable with non-HiFi recorded tapes.

The HiFi audio mode is Pulse Code Modulation. PCM is used to record audio
with the video head but separate from the video. The video head takes a
swipe across the tape. When it reaches near the bottom, it stops recording
video and starts recording DIGITAL audio using the same head.

During playback, the head listens for video sending it to the screen and
when it reaches the end of a swipe, shifts its attention to audio sending
the digits to a circuit that converts the signal back into stereo sound.

If the DIGITAL audio is not present on the tape the HiFi VCR will use the
old analog FM linear audio track instead.

In the 1980s and 1990s, some people used the Hi-Fi tracks on VHS and BetaMax
VCRs to record audio. This was a stopgap measure while affordable digital
audio was being developed and sounded far better than audio cassettes.

"David" wrote in message
.. .
On Thu, 27 Jul 2006 11:18:21 -0500, "SeeingEyeDog"
wrote:

If the VCR is of a stereo Hi-Fi vintage than the audio is recorded
digitally. It is fairly close to CD quality. Few people are aware of

this
fact.


FM, not digital.



Thanks.


D Peter Maus July 27th 06 10:22 PM

VCR sound quality for taping radio broacasts?
 
SeeingEyeDog wrote:
The "HiFi" audio in consumer grade HiFi VHS is recorded in Audio Frequency
Modulation (AFM).
Digital audio PCM is only available on high end S-VHS machines.



And some of the early 8MM....





"Mahmoud Ahmadinejad"
VCR Hi-Fi records/reads audio two ways:

The old analog way with the linear audio track on the long side of the

tape.
This mode is FM and is backward compatable with non-HiFi recorded tapes.

The HiFi audio mode is Pulse Code Modulation. PCM is used to record audio
with the video head but separate from the video. The video head takes a
swipe across the tape. When it reaches near the bottom, it stops recording
video and starts recording DIGITAL audio using the same head.

During playback, the head listens for video sending it to the screen and
when it reaches the end of a swipe, shifts its attention to audio sending
the digits to a circuit that converts the signal back into stereo sound.

If the DIGITAL audio is not present on the tape the HiFi VCR will use the
old analog FM linear audio track instead.

In the 1980s and 1990s, some people used the Hi-Fi tracks on VHS and

BetaMax
VCRs to record audio. This was a stopgap measure while affordable digital
audio was being developed and sounded far better than audio cassettes.




Scott Nelson July 28th 06 03:23 AM

VCR sound quality for taping radio broacasts?
 
I used to do this all the time. I would record the video of the local
preview channel along with the audio. The preview channel had the time
displayed constantly.

Scott

David wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jul 2006 05:04:48 GMT, m II wrote:

I remember someone using a VCR tape for audio recording from the radio.
He set the record time to six hours and when recording, would write down
the time in order to locate a desired segment at a later date.

How is the sound quality at such a slow tape speed? Speech may be
acceptable, but would music still be of good enough quality?


Use VHS HiFi. It records with an FM carrier. Excellent quality. Use
a cheap video camera to record a clock.


--
Stop by and visit me on the Web...

http://www.treasuredude.net.tc
or
http://pie.midco.net/treasuredude

"If you give a person a fish, they'll fish for a day. But if you train a
person to fish, they'll fish for a lifetime."
- Dan Quayle

Mark Zenier July 28th 06 05:21 PM

VCR sound quality for taping radio broacasts?
 
In article ,
SeeingEyeDog wrote:
If the VCR is of a stereo Hi-Fi vintage than the audio is recorded
digitally. It is fairly close to CD quality. Few people are aware of this
fact.


No, it's wideband FM on the same track as the video using some tricks:
head gap angled opposite the video, wider gap, and low frequency carriers
so that the sound signal is "under" the video signal in the oxide.
Seperate carriers per side, too, I think.

Mark Zenier
Googleproofaddress(account:mzenier provider:eskimo domain:com)



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:58 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
RadioBanter.com