Recorder stores TV stills (Jan, 1964)
I’m a big fan of any media you have to peel.
Recorder stores TV stills
This German recorder makes stills of moving TV images.Video pulses are fed through a recording head to a magnetic-foil disk (background above) spun at 3,000 r.p.m. Scanning speed is 2,000 inches a second. A pushbutton starts the cycle for an instantaneous single picture.
A playback feeds the stills to another TV set. Up to 10 can be recorded on one foil, which can be peeled off for filing.





Recorder stores TV “stills” on foil - and you peel them off!…
This recorder from the 60’s took “stills” of your TV using a spinning magnetic foil disk and recorded them on foil that you peel off and store - this needs to be re(made) - “Popular Science 1964″ - Link…….
Trackback by MAKE: Blog — August 17, 2006 @ 11:15 am
Actually that was the way to go until the mid 80s. There was essentially no other way of storing multiple still frames and displaying them.
In fact a bit later devices have been build which could store 30 seconds of still frames (at 30 fps). In the 70s there even was an early non-linear editing system which had lots of harddisk space to store about 17 minutes of low resolution monocrome videos.
Comment by Casandro — August 18, 2006 @ 2:57 am
Here’s a demo of the non-linear editing system.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9bNmsKBqFPQ
Comment by Casandro — June 18, 2008 @ 3:27 am