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Video tape to DVD Transfer in the UK from just £20.00

Dynamic DVD provides a professional Video tape To DVD Transfer service.

Dynamic DVD is the authority when it comes to Video tape to DVD Transfer in the UK. We use state-of-the-art equipment to make sure the job is done to the highest technical specification resulting in the best quality DVD that can be created from the original tape source. Dynamic DVD is based in London, UK.

    This service includes
  1. Digital re-mastering of your Video Tape
  2. Audio level balancing and enhancement
  3. Picture enhancement
  4. Audio converted to Dolby Stereo

The resulting video streams are authored and burned to DVD. We can get as much as four hours on a single DVD with most customers remarking that the resulting video is clearer, sharper and sounds better!

Don’t let your VHS Tape memories fade away, preserve them with Dynamic DVD!

Trust Dynamic DVD to preserve your memories and make sure you know what you are buying! There are many tape to dvd conversion companies who simply plug your precious memories into low quality DVD recorders and send you the result. This is the inferior way to preserve your memories as no digital corrections can be made to the video or the audio. For more information see the benefits of using Dynamic DVD.

The History of Video and Related Innovations

Wollensak model 1500 reel-to-reel audio recorder Charles P. Ginsburg

Charles Ginsburg led the research team at Ampex Corporation in developing the first practical videotape recorder (VTR). In 1951, the first video tape recorder (VTR) captured live images from television cameras by converting the information into electrical impulses and saving the information onto magnetic tape. Ampex sold the first VTR for $50,000 in 1956.The first VCassetteR or VCR were sold by Sony in 1971. Charles P. Ginsburg Charles Ginsburg led the Ampex research team that developed a new machine that could run the tape at a much slower rate because the recording heads rotated at high speed, allowing the necessary high-frequency response. Charles Ginsburg Biography of Charles Paulson Ginsburg, otherwise known as the "father of the video cassette recorder,


Video Recording

In the early days, film was the only medium available for recording television programmes. Thoughts turned to magnetic tape, which was already being used for sound, but the greater quantity of information carried by the television signal demanded new studies. During the 1950s, a number of American companies began investigating the problem.


Television Cameras
In the 1920s, American engineer, Philo Taylor Farnsworth devised the television camera, an image dissector, which converted the image captured into an electrical signal.


Television Cameras
The pick-up tube is the main element governing the technical quality of the picture obtained by the camera. The first electronic cameras using iconoscope tubes were characterised by very large lenses, necessary to ensure enough light reached the pick-up tube.


Video Stills - Digital Photography The still video or digital camera (the Sony Mavica single-lens reflex) was first demonstrated in 1981. It used a fast-rotating magnetic disc, two inches in diameter, recording on it up to 50 images formed in a solid-state device in the camera. The images were played back through a television receiver or monitor, or printed out.


The History of Recording Technology
Tape Recording Technology - Audio and video magnetic recording has had greater impact on broadcasting than any other single development since the invention of radio/TV transmission itself.


A Chronology of Magnetic Recording

Formats

VHS - Video tape in a large cassette format introduced by both JVC and Panasonic around 1976. This has been the most popular format for home use and video store rentals, however, it will be replaced by mini dv tapes and dvds. VHS stands for Video Home System.

Related Information

The Benefits of Digitization

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