GLOSSARY
- A/C Head
- Audio / Control Head. A combined unit which reads/writes
both the linear sound track and the control (sync)
pulses.
- Aerial
- The antenna which picks up a radio or TV transmission.
Also, the coax lead from the antenna which you plug into
the back of a VCR or TV set.
- Analogue
- A signal which is represented by some physical quantity
whose values are an analogue, or copy, of the signal
value being represented. For example, the signal
generated by a microphone is an electrical voltage, and
if the loudness doubles so does the voltage. Similarly, a
clock with hands is called analogue because the angular
position of a hand is an analogue of the time it
represents. Compare digital.
- AM
- Amplitude Modulation.
- Amplitude Modulation
- Representing a signal as a change in the amplitude
(strength, or level) of a fixed-frequency carrier.
- Audio Dub
- A special recording mode where the video signal on the
tape is left unchanged, but new sound is recorded.
- Audio Head
- The head which records / reads the sound information.
- Audio / Control Head
- A head which reads both the sound information, and the
other control and synchronisation information. Many VCRs
use a single or combined head for both.
- AV
- Audio / Video. Baseband signals. Compare RF.
- Azimuth
- The angle of a read/write head, relative to the direction
of writing. 0 degrees azimuth means it is "square
on".
- Badge Engineering
- The practice of changing the badge and sometimes other
minor cosmetics in order to make a machine from one
manufacturer look as if it was produced by another.
- Bandwidth
- The range of frequencies required by a signal. Standard
video requires a bandwidth of 5.5 MHz
- Baseband
- Raw signals which have not been modulated or mixed with
any other carrier or signal.
- Betamax
- Sony's domestic 1/2 inch format, introduced in 1975
(Japan and US) / 1978 (UK and Europe). The
"beta" comes from the Japanese word for
quality, so Betamax means Highest Quality.
- Broadcast
- A transmission aimed at multiple receivers, such as
public TV and radio. The opposite is Narrowcasting, which
means transmitting to one particular reciever (or small
group of recievers).
- Broadcast Quality
- Video of high enough quality to be used for broadcast TV.
A resolution of at least 500 lines is required, though
modern high-band consumer equipment (eg SVHS, Hi8, DV) is
good enough to be used where a full-sized camcorder would
be impractical.
- Capacitance
- An electronic property. The amount of electrical charge a
device can hold.
- Capstan
- A rotating shaft which pulls the tape through the
recording mechanism at a constant speed.
- Cartridge
- A case containing a single spool of tape. The tape is
wound out of the case onto another spool within the
machine, or is an endless loop. Compare cassette.
- Carriage
- The mechanism which holds the cassette and allows it to
be inserted or removed from the tape mechanism.
- Carrier
- The high-frequency signal onto which an actual
information signal is modulated.
- Cassette
- A case containing both spools of tape, which allows them
to be handled easily. Compare cartridge.
- CAV
- Constant Angular Velocity. Playing a disc at a fixed RPM,
which means that the track will pass the pickup at a
higher linear speed when the pickup is at the edge than
nearer the centre. Compare CLV.
- CD
- The now-ubiquitous 12cm digital audio disc format, also
used for computer data, video, photographs etc.
- Channel
- One particular TV program out of all those being
broadcast at once.
- Chassis
- The metal framework on which all of a VCR's tape
transport components are mounted.
- Chip
- See Integrated Circuit.
- Chrominance
- The colour information in a video signal. Compare
Luminance.
- C-Lacing
- The lacing system used by VCR, Betamax and U-Matic
recorders, where the tape is pulled out and around the
drum from one side, forming a C shape. Compare M-Lacing.
- Clone
- A machine which is built by one company but badge
engineered and otherwise reworked to make it appear to be
a different machine from a different manufacturer.
- CLV
- Constant Linear Velocity. Playing a disc so that the
track passes the pickup at a fixed linear speed, which
means spinning the disc more slowly when the pickup is at
the edge than nearer the centre. Compare CAV.
- Coherent
- All together. In laser light, coherent means that the
light waves are all in step: they have the same frequency
and phase.
- Colour Under
- A technique used in most video systems to record colour
without requiring the full bandwidth of a normal signal.
The chrominance is heterodyned with a reference signal,
to produce a low-frequency "difference" signal,
and this is then modulated onto the luminance signal.
- Cross Colour
- A video system of limited bandwidth can confuse the
highest luminance frequencies with chrominance
information. The effect is flickering colours, often seen
on tweed jackets and other fine-patterned clothing.
- Cue / Review
- The ability to fast-forward or rewind a video tape, while
still seeing the (speeded up) picture on the TV.
- CVC
- Compact Video Cassette. A 1/4 inch portable video format
from Technicolor / Funai, introduced in 1980.
- Digital
- A signal which is processed as binary (base 2) numbers,
represented by some physical quantity which only takes
two values. So, the binary number 011010 might be
represented by a sequence of voltage pulses
(off,on,on,off,on,off); doubling this value (to 110100)
changes the sequence of voltages but not their actual
values. Compare analogue.
- Discrete
- In electronics, discrete means using individual
components like transistors, capacitors etc, rather than
integrated circuits ("chips").
- DTF
- Dynamic Track Following. A system which uses a moveable
video head to accurately scan a track.
- Dubbing
- The process of copying a recording from one tape onto
another.
- Erase Head
- The head which erases information from the tape.
- Event
- A recording programmed into a timer.
- Field
- Half a frame, consisting of alternate lines - eg all the
odd ones or all the even ones.
- FM
- Frequency Modulation.
- Format
- The combination of dimensions, speeds and electronic
specifications which defines a particular cassette
recording system.For example, VHS and Betamax are both
formats.
- Frame
- A single still image from a TV signal. Standard TV runs
at 25 frames per second (30 in US/Japan). Compare Field.
- Frames Per Second
- The refresh rate of a TV signal. See frame.
- Frame Rate
- The number of Frames Per Second of a TV picture.
- Frequency Modulation
- Representing a signal as the change in frequency of a
carrier.
- Frontloader
- A VCR where the cassette is inserted into a slot in the
front of the machine. Compare Toploader.
- Gas Discharge
- A display technology similar to neon or fluorescent
tubes, which produces bright displays but uses a lot of
power.
- Guard Bands
- Gaps between tracks, necessary to prevent a head picking
up signals from adjacent tracks it reads its own track.
- Head
- A device which reads and / or writes information from /
to a magnetic tape.
- Head Drum
- A spinning cylinder which holds the read/write heads on a
helical scanning video machine.The drum guides the tape
so that the heads can stay in contact with it as they
spin past.
- Helical Scanning
- The normal method of recording video, where the
read/write heads are moved across the tape at high speed
by spinning them on the head drum, while the tape is
moved slowly past the drum.
- Heterodyning
- A high-frequency signal can be converted into a
low-frequency signal by "subtracting" a
reference signal of a known, fixed frequency which is
near that of the original. The result is a difference
signal which, by adding back a reference signal, can be
used to recreate the original one.
- HiFi
- High Fidelity. An audio system which can reproduce
frequencies from 200Hz to about 20,000Hz.
- High Band
- Some video formats come in two varieties: low band and
high band. A high-band machine gives better performance,
using higher bandwidth and signal separation etc; a
low-band machine is cheaper but performs less well.
- Holography
- The technology of storing information using the patterns
generated by interfering lasers. Can be used to create
holograms, true 3D pictures, or to store non-visual
information.
- Hz
- Hertz. The unit of frequency; 1Hz is one cycle per
second.
- I.C.
- Integrated Circuit
- Incandescent
- So hot that it's glowing. Of bulbs, means a normal
filament bulb, as opposed to a fluorescent, neon or LED.
- Infra-red
- Light which is of a longer wavelength (redder) than the
longest which we can see. Commonly used for remote
controls.
- Integrated Circuit
- A device containing many electronic components on a tiny
sliver of silicon. More commonly known as a silicon chip.
- Interference
- The unwanted effect of an electrical circuit on the
others nearby. A badly shielded car ignition can cause
sparks and buzzing on a TV set; this is interference.
- Interlacing
- The technique of scanning a TV frame as two fields, each
field comprising all the odd-numbered lines in the frame
or all the even lines.
- Lacing
- The process of wrapping the tape around the head drum and
other heads / guides in a video machine. All home VCRs
lace up automatically; early VTRs required manual lacing.
- Laser
- Light Amplification by Stimulated Emmission of Radiation.
A device which produces a very tight beam of pure,
monochromatic coherant light.
- LCD
- See Liquid Crystal Display.
- LED
- Light Emmitting Diode. An electronic "bulb"
which produces coloured light without the heat of a
normal bulb, and which uses less power and never burns
out.
- Line
- A single line of a TV picture. Standard TV has 625 lines
in a frame (525 in US/Japan)
- Linear
- In a line. In the video sense, a linear recording is one
where the head-to-tape motion is entirely that of the
tape itself - the heads remain stationary. Compare with
Helical Scanning.
- Liquid Crystal Display
- A display technology which uses a fluid with optical
properties which change when an electric field is
applied, to alter the polarisation of light passing
through it. LC displays take almost no power, but unlike
LED or Gas Discharge displays do not themselves generate
light.
- Logic Control
- An intelligent operator interface, which only performs
the requested action if it makes sense (eg it will ignore
the rewind button if the VCR is recording), and which
sometimes allows button presses to be "stacked
up" so that they will be executed when the machine
has finished doing what it is currently busy with.
- Long Play
- A technique to increase the record/playback time of a
format by slowing the tape down. This usually reduces the
picture quality, though this can be compensated for using
separate heads for SP and LP, and picture enhancing
circuitry.
- LP
- Long Play.
- Low Band
- Some video formats come in two varieties: low band and
high band. A high-band machine gives better performance,
using higher bandwidth and signal separation etc; a
low-band machine is cheaper but performs less well.
- Luminance
- The brightness information in a video signal. Compare
chrominance.
- Mains
- The household electricity supply - 240V 50Hz in the UK,
110V 60Hz in the USA.
- Micron
- A millionth of a metre; a thousandth of a millimetre.
- Microprocessor
- A "computer on a chip" - an electronic device
which can execute a stored program.
- M-Lacing
- A lacing pattern used by V2000 and VHS machines, where
the tape is pulled out by two fingers, one each side of
the head drum, forming an M shape with the drum in the
middle. Compare C-Lacing.
- Modulation
- The process of impressing one signal (the information)
onto another (the carrier).
- Modulator
- A device which allows a VCR to be connected directly to a
TV set. It converts a baseband video signal into an RF (aerial) signal.
- Monitor
- A TV set without a tuner. Used to display baseband video.
- Monochrome, Monochromatic
- Single coloured. For TVs / VCRs, refers to black and
white systems.
- Monophonic
- Single channel sound, as opposed to Stereo.
- NiCad
- Nickel Cadmium. The most common rechargeable battery
technology.
- Noise
- Interference, particularly hissing on audio or snow on
video.
- Noise Bars
- The bands of 'snow' across a picture during pause or
fast-forward/rewind.These are caused by the heads
crossing from one track to another, since the tape is not
moving at its usual speed so the heads can't track
properly.
- NTSC
- National Television Standards Committee. The colour TV
system used in North America and elsewhere.
- Optical
- Dealing with light.
- PAL
- Phase Alternating Line. The colour TV format used in the
UK, Australia and elsewhere.
- Pause-Record
- The ability to engage Pause and Record at the same time,
so that recording will start as soon as pause is
released. This is not only faster (since the machine is
already laced) but usually produces cleaner starts to
recordings.
- PCM
- Pulse Code Modulation. A digital audio recording format.
- Piano Key
- A style of operating control where the main function
buttons are large, protruding paddles resembling piano
keys. Usually used by wholly mechanical systems as they
have a large throw and therefore a large mechanical
movement.
- Pickup
- The part of any system which reads the signal from the
medium. For example, the read head on a tape recorder, or
the stylus on a record player.
- Picture Search
- See Cue / Review
- Piezo-electric crystal
- A crystal which generates an electric current if forced
to change shape (by squeezing or stretching), and changes
shape if an electric current is applied to it.
- Pinch Roller
- A rubber roller which presses the tape tightly against
the capstan.
- Portapak
- A term used to refer to the portable reel-to-reel VTRs in
the 60s.
- Power Supply
- The unit that allows a portable / separates VCR to be
connected to the mains.
- Preset
- A small variable resistor commonly used as a tuning knob
in older TV and VCR tuners. The preset tunes in one
particular button on the tuner's channel selector - that
button is then pre-set to that channel.
- Program
- In the video sense, the information needed to drive a
timer: the start time, stop time and channel to be
recorded etc.
- PVC
- Poly Vinyl Chloride. A type of plastic.
- Quad
- See Quadruplex.
- Quadrophonic
- An obsolete music system from the 70's which used 4
speakers (as opposed to stereo, with 2).
- Quadruplex
- The first successful video recording system, introduced
by Ampex in 1956. Quad used a vertical scanning system,
with the read/write heads mounted on a spinning disc to
scan the 2-inch tape across its width.
- Read/Write Head
- A head which is used to record and play back information
on a tape.
- Recording Density
- The area of magnetic surface (on a tape or disc) required
by a particular format to record a particular signal.
- Reel To Reel
- A tape machine which uses naked spools, as opposed to
cassettes or cartridges.
- Review
- See Cue / Review
- RF
- Radio Frequency. The signal picked up by a TV aerial. RF
signals include the video and audio, modulated onto a UHF
carrier.
- Scanning (1)
- The process of moving a head along a recorded track on a
magnetic tape or disc.
- Scanning (2)
- The process of moving an electron beam back and forth to
display a TV picture.
- Search and Store
- A tuning system where the machine scans the waveband and
stops whenever it finds a strong signal. This can then be
assigned to one of the tuner's channel buttons.
- SECAM
- Sequentiel Coleur avec Memoire. The colour TV system used
in France, the Middle East and elsewhere.
- Servo
- An electronic circuit which controls the speed of a
mechanism, measuring the actual speed and adjusting the
control signals as required to change to the desired
speed.
- Sessile
- Fixed in place, like a limpet or a plant. The opposite of
mobile.
- Slant-Azimuth
- A technique to prevent a head accidentally picking up
signals from an adjacent track. The two heads are mounted
at opposite angles (relative to the direction of
writing), so that the signal strength from an
accidentally read adjacent track is much reduced - only
recordings made by a head at the same angle will give a
strong signal.
- Snow
- In the TV / Video sense, the noise seen on a TV screen
when there is no signal.
- Solenoid
- An electromechanical device which produces a linear
motion (push or pull) when power is applied.
- Solid State
- An electronic device with no moving parts or
evacuated/gas filled glass envolopes. Solid State devices
consist of circuitry etched onto fragments of silicon or
another semiconductor.
- SP
- Short Play, Standard Play. The opposite of Long Play
- Spool (1)
- The reel or bobbin on which tape is wound. In a modern
cassette machine, the spools are inside the cassettes.
- Spool (2)
- To fast-forward or rewind.
- Still Frame
- The ability to pause the tape and leave a freeze-frame
picture on the screen.
- SVR
- Super Video Recording. Grundig's domestic tape format,
developed from VCR / VCR-LP in 1979.
- Tape Guides
- The pins, wheels and rollers which guide the tape around
the various heads in the recorder.
- Tape Transport
- The mechanism responsible for moving the tape, during
play/record, fast forward, rewind etc.
- Test Signal
- A signal generated by a VCR in order to have something to
tune the TV set into when setting up the machine.
Typically this will be a pattern of black and white
lines, sometimes with an audio tone as well.
- Time Coding
- Recording extra information on a tape so that an editing
system can identify the exact point on the recording,
usually down to the exact frame.
- Timer
- A device which allows a VCR to be programmed, so that it
can record one or more programs while unattended.
- Toploader
- A VCR where the cassette carriage raises out of the top
of the machine. Compare Frontloader.
- Track
- The area of a magnetic tape where the actual recorded
signal is. In helical scanning machines, the tracks are
recorded diagonally across the width of the tape, like
this: //////////////.
- Tracking
- Adjusting a VCR or VTR so that its heads accurately scan
the tracks on the tape.
- Trick Play
- Any playback function other than the basic normal-speed
play: cue/review, still frame, reverse play etc.
- TTU
- Tuner / Timer Unit. That part of a separates system
containing the tuner, timer and often power supply and
battery charger. The unit that is NOT required when out
shooting.
- Tube
- The glass display screen of a TV, or more generally any
thermionic device ("valve").
- Tuner
- A device which allows a TV or VCR to pick up broadcast
signals using an aerial, and one particular station to be
selected from all those available. It converts the
recieved RF
signal to a baseband video signal.
- U-Matic
- Sony's proffessional/industrial 3/4 inch format,
available in two versions: low band and high band.
- Unlacing
- The opposite of lacing; removing the tape from the tape
mechanism and returning it to the cassette.
- VCC
- Video Compact Cassette. An obsolete name for the Video
2000 format.
- VCR (1)
- Video Cassette Recorder. In the virtual museum, the term
VCR always means a normal, domestic video machine.
- VCR (2)
- Video Cassette Recording. The first true domestic video
format, introduced by Philips in late 1972.
- VCR-LP
- A long-play version of Philips original VCR video format,
introduced in 1978.
- VHS
- Video Home System. JVC's domestic 1/2 inch format,
introduced in 1976 (Japan and US) / 1978 (UK and Europe).
- VHS-C
- Compact VHS. A miniature version of VHS, which uses the
same tape and recording format but smaller cassettes.
- Videographer
- An obsolete term for someone who makes/shoots videos.
- Video 2000
- See V2000.
- Video8
- A miniature format using 8mm tape, designed by Sony and a
consortium of others and introduced in 1985.
- VTR
- Video Tape Recorder. In the virtual museum, this term
means a video recorder which does not have a tuner, timer
and / or modulator, so would not be suitable for home
use.
- V2000
- Video 2000. Philips domestic 1/2 inch format (which
allowed the tapes to be turned over, so was really a 1/4
inch format). Developed from VCR / VCR-LP, V2000 was
introduced in 1980.
- 8-Track
- An obsolete audio cartridge system, popular in the 70's.
8-Track cartridges used an endless loop of tape.
- 16mm
- A mid-range cine film gauge, higher quality than standard
8 or super 8, but not cinema quality.
-