VHS Standard: Difference between revisions
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(New page: '''''This article is a stub. You can help the GHN by expanding it.''''' On 9 September 1976, the first VHS model videotape recorder was announced. The standard had been developed at the Y...) |
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'''''This article is a stub. You can help the | <p>'''''This article is a stub. You can help the ETHW by expanding it.''''' </p> | ||
On 9 September 1976, the first VHS model videotape recorder was announced. The standard had been developed at the Yokohama Plant of Victor Company of Japan, Limited, by a team of engineers headed by Shizuo Takano and Yuma Shiraishi. | <p>[[Image:VHS recording standard.jpg|thumb|right|Development of VHS]] </p> | ||
<p>On 9 September 1976, the [[Milestones:Development of VHS, a World Standard for Home Video Recording, 1976|first VHS model videotape recorder]] was announced by Victor Company of Japan. The HR-3300, weighing 30 pounds, was smaller and lighter than other equivalent VTRs. The standard had been developed at the Yokohama Plant of Victor Company of Japan, Limited, by a team of engineers headed by Shizuo Takano and Yuma Shiraishi. The basic design, with subsequent improvement, gained wide customer acceptance and became the world standard. </p> | |||
[[Category:Signal_generation_&_recording]] | |||
[[Category:Magnetic_recording]] | |||
[[Category:Signals]] | |||
{{Timeline | |||
|Date=1/1/1976 | |||
|Priority=Electrical | |||
|Description=On 9 September 1976, Victor Company of Japan released a VHS-format home video tape recorder (VTR), the HR-3300. Weighing 30 pounds, it was smaller and lighter than other equivalent VTRs. The basic design, with subsequent improvement, gained wide customer acceptance and became the world standard. | |||
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Latest revision as of 06:46, 23 November 2017
This article is a stub. You can help the ETHW by expanding it.
On 9 September 1976, the first VHS model videotape recorder was announced by Victor Company of Japan. The HR-3300, weighing 30 pounds, was smaller and lighter than other equivalent VTRs. The standard had been developed at the Yokohama Plant of Victor Company of Japan, Limited, by a team of engineers headed by Shizuo Takano and Yuma Shiraishi. The basic design, with subsequent improvement, gained wide customer acceptance and became the world standard.