Hello! And welcome to the first video of
No-Effort November! A series of videos for the month of November
where no effort is made. Today, we are doing another Beta and VHS comparison. But, unlike ye olde format war, weāre not
focusing on things like recording time, picture quality, or silliness of their respective
names. Instead, we are going to look at their actual
videocassettes, and I think youāll find that the VHS cassette is a fair bit cleverer than that of Beta. Iāve made a lot of videos covering the format
war which can you check out through the card that should be popping up right about now, though YouTube seems to have problems lately getting the card to -- oh, there it is. See, that joke might not have worked for some
of you because it actually didnāt appear! Anyway, thereās also a link in the description
for the inevitable case of the card not appearing. Now we just have to hope that I remembered
to put it there. Moving on then, I have a pair of almost-randomly-selected videocassette recorders in front of me. One of them is, of course, a VHS machine. And the other, is a Beta machine. Now, the age difference between these two
doesnāt matter because what weāre after in this here video is a closer look at the
way their tape transport mechanisms interact with the tape in the cassettes. Take a look at the bottom of a Beta cassette,
and youāll see two sprocket holes, and a gaping triangular hole carving a nice little
canyon down towards the center. It annoys me very much that they didnāt
go all the way and instead made a trapezoid. Oh well. By the way, in North American English it is
indeed pronounced ābay-daā. Not ābee-tah." Feel free to comment on why weāre wrong. Youāll find the write-protect tab down here,
as well as a notch in the upper right which contains this little wedgey thing that unlocks
the lid of the cassette. A pokey thing inside the VCR pushes the wedgey
thing in, which unlocks the lid, and the action of the lid opening unlocks the spools of the
tape and allows them to rotate. This locking device makes it rather difficult
to open the lid with oneās hands, which arguably makes it a better design for protecting
the tape, but comes with the tragic downside of making the cassette a terrible fidgeting
device. Look at the bottom of a VHS cassette and youāll
also find a pair of sprocket holesā¦ which I realize... sprocket holes is not the correct
word. I believe I meant cogs for the tape reels. Anyway. And, youāll also see a larger and wider
variety of other holes, including this one that you may have never even noticed before. Such subtlety. Notice how these two both have curves. This one accommodates the absolutely chunky
tape reels that JVC crammed in here because they, rightly, knew that recording time was
gonna be important. But this one is way more subtle. Youāre gonna love what that curve is for
when I tell you. Now, weāve also got this hole, which a spike
inside the VCR will rudely insert itself into, and that unlocks the tape reels, and this
bigger one is for lightbulbs on sticks which help the VCR detect when the end of the tape
has been reached. VHS cassettes have the lid unlocker placed
here, which is excellent because it makes the cassette a much better fidgeting device. Now, if youāve drunk the Kool-Aid, youāll
have undoubtedly been told that Beta was a much more well-engineered product, and that
VHS was just a sloppy knock-off. Well, I donāt know about you, but this gaping
hole sure seems to leave more of the tape exposed and vulnerable. Yeah there are these half-width guards that
help, a little, and you could totally still stick your fingers in the two larger holes
of a VHS cassette, but on the whole (pause with an obnoxious smirk) the VHS cassette seems to do
a better job protecting the precious tape. And all those holes are there for specific
purposes. Letās now take a look at the VCRs. The first thing to know is that all videocassette
recorders will contain some sort of device that makes your heads spin. Thatās the shiny silver drum here, and here. Of note is that the Beta drum is a fair bit
larger, which means that the speed the heads travel at is a little bit higher than that
of VHS, because both drums spin at the same rotational speed. This is one of the many reasons people would
tell you back in the ā80s that Beta had a better picture quality. Which, from my admittedly decades-down-the-road
experience I find to be a fairly dubious claim (or at the very least, largely insignificant)
But ya know, better point it out! There are people out there who are still mad
that Beta didnāt win the format war, and itās a fair bet theyāll let you know about
it in the space below this video. Anyway, while I do love pressing buttons,
letās move on. ā« dubious and largely insignificant music ā« One thing that inevitably comes up whenever
I or presumably anybody makes a video comparing Beta and VHS is the fact that Beta continued
to be used in the professional market for decades. So, yes it failed in the consumer market but
because the professional market continued to use Beta we know that it was truly the
better product and consumers were idiots for backing VHS. Now, I will agree that consumers often make
silly choices. However! You are not talking about Betamax. Youāre talking about Betacam. Betacam was the professional version of Betamax
which continued to be used for many decades after the format war ended. Now, I understand why you would confuse the
two. Theyāre both called āBeta somethingā
and in fact Betacam cassettes look an awful lot like this, some are identical in fact
(they just say Betacam, not Betamax) but theyāre not the same formats. You canāt play a Betacam tape in a home
Beta VCR and expect anything good to come out of it, if anything at all. Betacam continued to be updated through the
years, in fact it was eventually moved to HD and even digital signals. So, yes, Betacam did keep going in the professional
realm but it is very much only tangentially related to Betamax. Anyway, letās continue. Both of these machines have to get the tape
out of the cassette, and make sure it touches a laundry list of items. Of course, it needs to wrap at least 180 degrees
around the head drum, but it also needs to pass by the erase head, the audio and tracking
heads, and in the case of the Beta machine, these two sensors (which I will explain shortly). Now, with a cassette in place, but not yet
threaded, youāll immediately see a few differences between these formats. First is that the head drum on the Beta machine
is quite a bit farther away from the cassette than the VHS drum. Youāll also notice that thereās a not-insignificant
amount of space behind it as well. The VHS transport was always a fair bit more
compact than that of Beta, and while in the early days of the format war itās not like
that mattered at all since the machines were massive, in our soon-to-happen lust for miniaturization
this would prove kind of annoying for Sony. While their Betamovie camcorder solved that
problem in a very clever (though incredibly compromised) fashion, VHS enjoyed a more compact
mechanism from day one, perhaps somewhat ironic when you consider that the cassette itself
is significantly larger. But then again, that larger cassette allowed
them to create the VHS-C format and use simple adapters for use in full-size VCRs. Anyway, the component I deliberately left
out of the discussion of all the things the tape needs to pass through so I could save
that for right now is the capstan. Tape-based formats generally use Captain Stan
over here to move the tape through the transport at a steady speed. A rubber pinch roller will squeeze the tape
between itself and the capstan, and the constant rotational speed of the capstan in turn causes
the tape to move through the transport at a constant linear speed. Now, letās look at where the Capstanās
Quarters are for both of these machines. VHS puts it right here, and youāll see its
accompanying pinch roller right next to it. On Beta, itās way the frick over there for
some reason. And its pinch roller is nowhere to be found. Ah! Now weāre getting to the point of this video. See, Beta and VHS used entirely different
methods of removing the tape from the cassette shell. VHS uses whatās called an M-load. The two largest holes on the bottom of the
cassette (manages to completely miss) -- those two -- allow these two moveable tape guides to slip behind the tape when itās
lowered on top of them. When the transport is engaged, these move
towards the rear of the machine, looping the tape around the drum, and a little helper
will usually swing out once the guides have passed it to pull the tape against the erase
head. Since this kinda-sorta forms the shape of
the letter M, the name M-load was chosen. Now, going back to Beta, look around a little
harder and youāll eventually find the pinch rollerā¦ here. Nowhere near the capstan. In a Beta machine, the pinch roller does double
duty. Just as the VHS cassette gets lowered on top
of the tape guides, the Beta cassette is lowered on top of the pinch roller. When itās time to get the tape out of the
cassette, it (along with the tape guides flanking it on either side) YANKS OUT about a mile
of tape and makes a very, and literal, roundabout trip to the capstan. Once itās there, a little lever dude will
put pressure on the pinch roller, pushing it against the capstan, and now the tape can
be moved through the mechanism. This loading mechanism is essentially just
a miniaturized version of the U-load system Sony devised for their earlier U-matic. You see, if you look at this from overhead,
youāll find that the tape makes the shape of the letter U. Now, somehow, this got named the B-load system
when it was moved to Betamax, and itās said that the name Betamax came from the fact that
this resembles the greek letter Beta. I am to this day baffled by that anecdote, as I cannot seem, no matter how I try, to imagine this shape as reminiscent of that shape. But whatever. So, there are two things worthy of note, or
noteworthy. First is this explains why the hole on the Beta cassette is so fricken big as the rather large pinch roller and
those tape guides all need to fit behind the tape in that space. And second is that once the tape has been
removed from the cassette, none of the tape transport components are very close to it
at all. Sony designed the Beta cassette as just a
container of tape. The machine removes it from the box, and from
that point on it might as well not exist. But the VHS cassette is much more clever. It is designed to become *part* of the tape
transport. The fact that the head drum is closer to the
cassette is no coincidence. Everything is closer to the cassette. And some things are even inside of it. That small hole up there is designed to accommodate
the capstan. When the cassette falls down into the loaded
position, the capstan is already behind the tape. And that curve in the plastic is there so
that the pinch roller can squeeze the capstan without rubbing against the cassette itself. Such an elegant solution! In this particular machine we find a rather
small pinch roller, and an additional tape guide occupies the curved space. And of course, letās not forget about the
lightbulb on a stick! If youāve got much of any experience with
a VHS cassette youāll have undoubtedly noticed that the tape leaders, thatās the bit of
tape at each end thatās meant to be a little stronger to protect it from breaking,
are clear. The cassette is designed with a light path
between the center of this big hole and these two smaller holes hiding under the cassette
lid. Light sensors that sit right next to these
holes will see the light pass through the cassette when the end of the tape has (been) (but he didn't say been) reached. Thatās pretty clever, if you ask me. A newer machine like this will instead use
a couple of infrared LEDs on a stick. Still. Same concept. Beta, meanwhile, went much more old-school. The tape leaders on a Beta cassette are not
clear, but metallic. Located near both ends of the tape transport
are what basically amount to metal detectors, and these sense the end of the tape. Let the record state that Sony used the technology
of the 8-track to signal the end of the tape in Betamax. While weāre talking about the differences
in tape handling, Iād like to address a claim made by some of the Betamax loyalists
out there. It was often claimed that the Beta transport
was more gentle to the tape, as unlike in a VHS machine where the tape has to make two
180 degree turns, āthere are no sharp curves in Betaā. Excuse me, but what is this? That looks darn near like a 180 to me. And up here in a VHS machine, the tape makes
two 90 degree turns, not a 180. Sure, maybe you wanna call that a 180, but letās count the places where the tape touches something. First, beta; One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six. Seven. Eight. Nine. Ten. Eleven. Twelve. Thirteen. Fourteen. And now VHS; One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six. Seven. Eight. Nine. Ten. Eleven. Now. Are each of the things the tape touches gonna
put the same amount of wear on the tape? No. And does the number of things the tape touches
change from VCR to VCR within the same format? Yes. But this claim seems so incredibly backwards
to me that I felt I needed to bring it up. Also of note is that on a VHS machine, the
entire top half of the drum spins, whereas on a Beta machine, only the heads spin and
the drum itself remains motionless. This was another thing brought up in favor
of Beta, since obviously thatās better for the tape. But I think this is actually wrong. It may be counterintuitive, but the spinning
drum of a VHS machine can create an air curtain, meaning that the tape actually just floats
above it. Now, obviously only the top half of the drum
spins so the tape does rub against the motionless bottom part during some of its travel, particularly
at the end of the drum, but you can clearly see on this Beta machine that, after years
of tape dragging across the motionless drum, its surface has actually been polished a little
bit. That canāt be good for the tape. Regardless of the particulars, there is certainly
a delicious irony to the fact that the Beta transport works like this. Beta cassettes are smaller, right? And they contain less tape, right? Thatās the main reason Beta failed, as it
just never had the recording time of VHS. And no, it wasnāt pornography, thatās
a myth. You could get porn on Beta, Sony had no control
over what content was being distributed so stop saying āSony wouldnāt allow pornā
because thatās nonsense and easily disproved. Anyway. For a system so short on tape, youād think
that this āletās just yank out all the tape!ā method would have been avoided. Want to see exactly how much more tape the
Beta machine needs just to make it through the transport? Great! So do I! Letās just do a little snip snip and compare. Just look at the difference! The Beta machine needs (obviously recorded later)
TWELVE more inches of tape! Thatās about (again, recorded later)
THIRTY centimeters! Keep in mind that this entire length here
can never be used, so while the actual distance from the first head to the last might not
be all that different compared to VHS, this whole return path can never be recorded onto
at the start of a tape. Now, since thatās obviously a tiny portion
of the overall tape in the cassette, does it really matter? No! Of course not! None of this matters! Weāre talking about two dead formats here
as if their pros and cons matter in the slightest in 2019! They donāt! Itās over! Itās done! Itās history! If you bought a Beta machine, feel free to
keep being smug about it. But you backed the wrong horse, oh well, life
sucks sometimes. Now, whereās my HD-DVD player? ā« second-rate smooth jazz ā« Hey there. So, I just wanted to add here at the end that
history is weird and there were indeed some VHS machines that used a U-load system like
Betamax. If memory serves they were all made by Philips. Whether there were any Beta machines that
used an M-load, Iām not sure. But I kinda doubt it, given how reluctant Sony
would be to change things up, and given how few third-party manufacturers there were making
Beta machines compared to VHS. In a similar vein, itās worth nothing that
not all VHS machines (or indeed Beta machines) would put all the components in the same places. Some VHS machines used this rather odd arrangement
whereby the pinch roller would be lifted up and out of the way so that the capstan could
be placed in front of the cassette. I have no idea why this arrangement was used
as it seems like it offers no practical advantage and also comes with increased mechanical complexity,
but it serves as an example of the fact that just because the standard of the format never
changed, doesnāt mean those specifications werenāt achieved in weird and wacky ways. But this one is a way more subtle. Is āa way more subtle curveā. Thatās how the line should have been written. ...they rightly knew that tape recording /time/... Tape /recording/ time. /Recording/ time. /Recording/ time. ...that mattered at all because sinceā¦ because
since! Because since! I said because and since! Thatās because Iām not reading the line
as I wrote it. It YANKā¦ (awkward pause). Oh. No I needed to read that! *silly noise* A light bulb on a steck. If... ON A STECK ...the heads move and the drum remains the motionble eugh bleugh ble Usually I'd put a joke or something here, but it's No Effort November and I can't be bothered. Oooh, but is this a joke, then? That's an interesting conundrum. Not as interesting as, say, air travel though. That's some interesting stuff.
My head is spinning from the high quality of this supposedly no-effort effort. Bravo!
As a former Blockbuster employee, I hate all tape home media equally. I worked there from 01-04, the peak and the switch over, from VHS to DVD. VHS was bulky, required rewinding, degraded significantly over the short time they were in circulation.
I really don't care if Beta was "better" because, much like HD-DVD, there's nothing I want to watch on Beta. There is plenty I want to watch on VHS and Laserdisc, though.
two videocasettes were harmed in the making of this video
YOU MONSTER
also
"I would normally put a joke here, bit it's no effort november"
I really appreciate how much effort you put into the little details most people don't end up seeing
Now I can't remember if VHS tapes got warm in the player, but I can convince myself this was a thing. Was the light stick the reason, or is there plenty of other heat generated?
I liked the part about the holes.
The card joke worked perfectly for me. In fact it's one of those where I'm almost mad at how good the comedic timing is and how subtly it's delivered. I also appreciate the delicious irony of using a Sony VHS machine.
And holy crap, you got up from the table! On camera! I didn't think it was possible.
Was that a "Technical Difficulties" reference when you said "A pair of nearly randomly selected video cassette recorders in front of me"? It sounded so much like Tom Scott's intro to "Citation Needed", it caused me to pause the video for a moment.