4 out of those 5 ICs are 4000-series logic chips. That's because all it did was allow the signal through from input to output until it detected the start of the vertical blanking pulse, then it would switch the output to deliver its own, clean blanking pulse for the correct amount of time before switching back to the input signal right at the end of the vertical blanking pulse. In other words, instead of trying to remove the copyright protection inserted into the blanking pulse, the device would simply remove the blanking pulse completely and substitute its own, clean blanking pulse. One or more of those transistors (Q1, Q2, etc) would have been used as the switching/buffering circuit, switched on or off by the logic chips. 4013- Dual, D-type flip-flop (probably part of the switching circuit but could be part of the timing circuit) 4025- Triple, 3-input NOR gate (part of the switching circuit) 4040- 12-stage binary ripple counter (part of the timing circuit) 4081- Quad, 2-input AND gate (part of the switching circuit) MC14538BCP- Dual, Precision Retriggerable/Resettable Monostable Multivibrator (part of the timing circuit) Good times, when removing copy protection was simple.
@PhirePhlame
5 жыл бұрын
Did closed captioning survive that process? They're stored in vertical blanking, too.
@warnerbrosanddisneyvhsdvdb9015
5 жыл бұрын
JasonMasters I went. To a library or a video store back then to rent a vhs tape in the late 1990s
@crumplezone1
3 ай бұрын
I had a lump in my throat when you started talking about the 80s, simpler happy times, many people I knew and loved are no longer here yet I am still here and just going through the motions
@leslieeckhardt504
4 жыл бұрын
Back in 1986, BACK TO THE FUTURE was the first movie I tried to copy. From my old sears Beta machine to my new Sanyo Betacord. I had no idea why the picture was going bright to dark. Boy, does your video bring back memories!
@bsanchez3563
4 ай бұрын
Heh childhood me trynna copy the public library simpsons ocmplete sixth season dvds on a dvd player onto a vxr an noticing when not playing bakc but merely passthrough to tv set itd become darkened but still watchabke but when played back by the tape to see what I got fwiw it was merely static.
@mikegarrens5286
2 ай бұрын
1982 I was able to copy Poltergeist with some cables just messing around. I was able to do this. Then I tried copying a movie called The stunt Man from 1980 and I got the copy guards Worst picture I've ever seen.
@billhall8745
2 жыл бұрын
Video 2000 machines were not affected by Macrovision. They copied VHS tapes perfectly. The copy protection was recorded onto the V2000 which meant that the good V2000 copy could not be used to copy back to VHS. My local video shop hired VHS machines as well as tapes, delivering and collecting them. I had a good collection of films on V2000. I think the video shop was copying VHS to V2000 for their V2000 rental tapes as they were just in plain boxes.
@TheNameisPlissken1981
Жыл бұрын
I am old enough to remember when movies became "priced to own" as they were called. I think WB was the first or one of the first studios to charge $24.99 for certain newly released films. The first one I got was in February 1990. I was a sophomore in high school. Between classes, I called my older sister at work and begged her to stop at the mall on her way home and buy me Lethal Weapon II on video. Now, my sister knew how much I loved movies and since I never made such a request before, she bought it for me! I had that tape for 20 years. Later that year, my brother taught me how to hook up our two VCR's to transfer videos. Then, for 20 bucks, I bought a little box called "The Terminator 2" (I shit you not) which bypassed the copy guard put on the rented tapes. For the next 10 years, I used it to duplicate videos every Tuesday when the new movies came out. Good times. (I really have to start watching the videos BEFORE I comment) That said, when I switched over to DVD's in the late '90s/early '00s, I would rent DVD's and transfer them to video. I remember when Die Another Day was released, it had a copy guard on it. Skeptical, I plugged in my T2 and it actually removed it!
@joyange1
6 жыл бұрын
When DVDs first came out. Macrovision wrecked havoc on the legitimate use of DVD for a lot of people. I'll explain. DVD players, when they came out, did not have an RF output on them, only audio/video. But most TV's back then still only had an RF input only on them. So most people would try to use their VCR as a RF modulator. Make sense, RIGHT? Well here's the problem. Most VCR's would still react to the Macrovision signal from the DVD player. Even though you were NOT trying to make a copy of the DVD onto a VHS tape. This forced a lot of people to have to go out and buy a separate RF modulator just so they could hook their DVD player to their TV.
@BilisNegra
6 жыл бұрын
"TV's back then still only had an RF input only on them"? I don't know where things were as you say, but at least in Europe Scart conectivity certainly predated the DVD format launch by ages, and well, the good old composite rca conectors are almost as old as the sun!
@meetoo594
6 жыл бұрын
All the tellys I have owned since the mid 80`s have SCART sockets on them allowing composite s-video and rgb input. You would have to go way back to the early 80`s to struggle to find a telly without a/v inputs. This is in the U.K, maybe the U.S. was different.
@TylerP223
6 жыл бұрын
Yeah the US never got SCART for some reason, or RGB for that matter outside of VGA and a few specialized applications, until HDMI assimilated everything we used RCA jacks in some form or another for everything except for digital audio. And RF was still the main way to go in the US until the 2000s if you didn't buy higher end televisions.
@markolsen7438
6 жыл бұрын
You really don't know do you? It had absolutely nothing to do with RF or how you connected your VCR to another. Macrovision effected the AGC or automatic gain control, which is the line that you see when your horizontal control is off just slightly and your picture starts to roll. I could get technical about how it was encoded on the tape but don't think you would understand
@meetoo594
6 жыл бұрын
@mark: Actually he is right. Using a vcr as a pass-through for a dvd player without rf output would trigger Macrovision. Same with those combo tv/vcr`s that were popular a decade or so ago. Later vcrs had a flag in their firmware that would detect and activate macrovision if it even detected a protected signal (like the dvd being routed through the vcr`s rf modualtor). So, yeah, dont be such a dick eh.
@ScottishTeeVee
4 жыл бұрын
I still have two machines that do this, a GTH ACE standard convertor and a CopyMate video copy enhancer. I still use the ACE. Back in the day, we used JVC SVHS VCRs, made perfect copies, in fact even though Im in Scotland I have that NTSC JVC VCR seen in this video.
@BlueNeon81
8 жыл бұрын
The primary use of this device was really to stabilize picture of VHS tapes with loss of synchronization. And yes, Macrovision override was the secondary use :D
@databits
8 жыл бұрын
+BlueNeon81 - Based on what the label says, I'm thinking Macrovision override was the primary use, but we can agree to disagree. :)
@smeezekitty
8 жыл бұрын
The warning reads like a prohibition wine bricks. It definitely sounds like it's primary use but it does help stabilize too
@12voltvids
8 жыл бұрын
That was a front. It was to copy tapes. That's why they made selling them illegal.
@speedyboishan87
8 жыл бұрын
Hi would a Macromaster (Macrovision Filter Removal) box be more efficient since it needs to be powered up it uses scart/scart to rca phono.
@MyManiacGamer
8 жыл бұрын
+laughing nutter don't think they use scarts very much in U.S mind you
@TheRealSugaBabi
7 жыл бұрын
okay, this guys voice is very amazing. he should consider voice over work.
@fisqual
4 жыл бұрын
Right? It's almost as good as Dan Bell's quiet times but with nerd shit. Lol
@brandonbert
2 жыл бұрын
Can confirm. Those suckers work like a champ! They do indeed re-generate the video signal. I had one that used a DC adapter and a red LED to signal that it was getting power and working. The 9V battery model is genius. They paid for themselves after one or two tapes back in the day. They also made you popular with friends and family who wanted a favor. : )
@brandonbert
2 жыл бұрын
My Old Man had the Star Wars movies in his collection. He probably utilized one of these devices to get a decent copy. As a kid, I pulled those tapes out and loaded them into the VCR countless times. : )
@ObiTrev
8 жыл бұрын
I remember my Dad using the Video Stabilizer to fix a fuzzy VHS of Tom and Jerry we rented from Blockbuster. We connected it to our first VCR, which was the external recording unit from an 80s personal camcorder. Later in highschool, I found out that the video stabilizer could still be used to circumvent copy protection on DVD players!
@5roundsrapid263
8 жыл бұрын
I remember our video store offered insurance for tapes! They had a sun-melted tape on the counter with a price tag of $89.99 as a warning. I knew a lot of people with two VCRs, who dubbed tapes like this all the time. They had full shelves of pirated tapes.
@databits
8 жыл бұрын
+5Rounds Rapid - the sun-melted tape was a good example for people to notice!
@norbkowa
7 жыл бұрын
I had and still have a Toshiba VCR, it was a multi system vcr that actually removed macrovision when copied tapes. I used to make copies for friends because nobody else could do it.
@PhirePhlame
5 жыл бұрын
Some earlies didn't have automatic gain control, which is the feature exploited by Copyguard.
@CineBrosSupreme
11 ай бұрын
I wish I knew about this thing back in the day!! So many tapes I couldn't copy because of Macrovision. It was always a gamble, too: I'd start recording with my fingers crossed, and quickly enough I'd discover which tapes were copy protected. After a while, I pretty much knew which tapes / companies were protected and which ones weren't. MCA Videocassette Inc. weren't, and neither were the early MCA Home Video tapes (up until '85 or so). MGM/UA in those big book boxes were fine, as were the early Warner Home Video clamshells. Media, Prism, U.S.A. Home Video were all good. I tell ya, I had become a pro at knowing which ones were gonna copy, and which ones weren't, lol!
@1959blantz
5 жыл бұрын
I paid $20 for mine back in 1985. I still have it even though it will never be used again. I copied 100s of movies with this device at the added cost of a 9 volt battery.
@databits
5 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your comment!
@vconqwstify
8 жыл бұрын
I typically copied from VHS to Beta... the Macrovision didn't work on my Beta units. (But I still use the Stabilizer when I copy to DVD)
@databits
8 жыл бұрын
+vconqwstify - that;s cool
@vconqwstify
8 жыл бұрын
Sometimes you just need to backup that old VHS tape for posterity.
@shessometimesdoublechocola2646
8 жыл бұрын
+vconqwstify Yeah, but just the ones that you can't rebuy in higher quality, such as your own creations that are on VHS originally or news, etc.
@vconqwstify
8 жыл бұрын
Bingo!
@vconqwstify
8 жыл бұрын
..and re-buy and re-buy...
@thatguyontheright1
6 жыл бұрын
Had to use one of these as a kid because I had a 13 inch VHS TV combo unit, but the VHS didn't work. Even when not recording, macrovision engaged on external VCRs.
My understanding was that Macrovision altered the sync signal in such a way that a second generation "copy" would just not work. Probably unknown to anyone but Betamax users, these movies would copy just fine to a Betamax machine. It was because Sony regenerates the sync signal before recording. The only movie I had trouble copying was Forbidden Planet in which there was a shift in the vertical scan. I originally had a pair of Betamax machines, but bought a VHS unit to play rental movies, and if I chose, I could make Betamax copies.
@soothsayer2406
Жыл бұрын
I have been waiting 36 years for this info.... thanks... better late then never
@patricklena9307
3 жыл бұрын
The way we got around macrovisioning Was we would 1st try VHS to VHS And if it was macrovision we would hook up my beta recorder , recording from vhs to beta the scrambling wouldn't affect the process.
@jeremycrispo1993
5 жыл бұрын
So does this work when you copy VHS tapes to DVD?
@TimBurVlogs
4 жыл бұрын
Yes!
@vincentyzer1627
3 жыл бұрын
i wanna make a dvd copy of a tv recording of Dr No, so i think that works fine.
@williamgallop9425
6 жыл бұрын
An english electronics -magazine had in 80s how to make one, made one and it worked perfectly. Only that my main videorecorder was sony betamax, that had no problems with macrovision. Copied even the signal perfectly.
@johanhansson4574
4 жыл бұрын
One of my vcr didn't care about any copy protections. It was a really old vcr like from the 70s. I always wondered why.
@DimensionDude
8 жыл бұрын
Nice video. I've considered making a video showing how the Macrovision signal worked (using an oscilloscope) but was a bit concerned about the legal implications. On another note, I have an Apex DVD player with the "secret" menu that allows the Macrovision signal to be turned off. A nice feature, but who would want a VHS copy of a DVD movie? :)
@databits
8 жыл бұрын
+DimensionDude - haha so true!
@bsanchez3563
4 жыл бұрын
Unless it were dvhs or possibly wvhs
@just_passing_through
Жыл бұрын
In the mid 80’s I had two VCRs. My original 1982 mono National (Panasonic) VCR and a newer HiFi VHS machine. I copied many rental tapes at the time. I rented The Outsiders, and it was a HiFi tape. I loved that movie and wanted copy, but a HiFi copy but only had one HiFi VCR (this was before macrovision). I copied the tape, and then opened up each cassette and swapped the reels over, then took back the original cassette with the mono copy inside. Lol. The things we do…. I can imagine the people who rented it after me spent hours trying to adjust the tracking to get the HiFi audio track to play.
@R33Racer
6 жыл бұрын
Holy shit, they were never that expensive in the UK, wow. I remember having a copy of Toy Story in 1996 from one of my Dad's friends. It was grainy and the audio was crap, barely audible even. I assume it had some kind of copy protection like this one. I even remember some Disney VHS's having intros before the main feature, that told the owner that they can't copy (this) VHS tape(s) with quality, even had a kid voice actor complaining about the quality. Just like I complained when I was 6/7 X).
@djchakir
6 жыл бұрын
I also had a Video Stabilizer unit which worked great. In a later period I bought an Samsung 'Worldwide video recorder'. This baby could copy anything I threw at it.
@ThisIsAdamB
6 жыл бұрын
I had (and still do have) one of these and it worked quite well stabilizing my video signals. How I got mine was funny, though. I’m looking at the ads for things like this in the back of Video Magazine or Video Review, whatever I was getting at the time. It’s about 1989, 1990. I look at the ads selling these boxes and realize the address you could send a check to to get one was less than a mile from my place. I called the number, asked if I could come by and pay cash. They said sure, come by. It was just a dingy little call center, 3-4 people answering phones and stuffing boxes in to envelopes. Ok the story isn’t funny but I’ll bet none of you got yours that way, huh?
@dmr8x2
7 жыл бұрын
i still have and use mine.. we paid $30 in the 90s.. just need to check the 9v every so often ..
@wolvenar
6 жыл бұрын
Thanks for making me feel so old :-/
@ed10523
8 жыл бұрын
About 20 Years ago, i rented a copy of Saving Private Ryan, and During an argument, i broke the Tape, and brought it back to the Video Chain Store. I was charged 79 dollars to cover the cost of the tape. You will be glad to know that i own a DVD copy of Saving Private Ryan purchased from a Local Store, for 5 dollars on Clearance...LOL!!! Saving Private Ryan will be the most memorable movie i have ever owned..LOL!! P.S I Love the Channel. A Big Fan!
@databits
8 жыл бұрын
+Heriberto Mendoza - thanks for being a fan and sharing your story! I see that movie all the time at cost of 1.00 or less!
@ed10523
8 жыл бұрын
+databits You are Welcome...Cheers!
@ehrichweiss
6 жыл бұрын
I've got one of those boxes around here somewhere. It worked really well, IIRC.
@chris1275cc
5 жыл бұрын
In the mid 90's I would rent the tape, make a copy onto the cheapest blank VHS I could find, disassemble the cassettes and literally swap the reels out, then take the crap one back to blockbuster. I must have done it over 100 times and never got caught.
@miguelhamrol6567
2 ай бұрын
That's why the video club where I rented movies covered the screws of the cassette with glue.
@ChadQuick270W
3 жыл бұрын
Two great VCR’s there 👍. Oh how I hated Macrovision as much as I hate regional encoding on DVD’s today 😡. I have a Region 2 DVD player to watch my British programs that aren’t available in Region 1.
@johntracy72
Жыл бұрын
The black one is S-VHS ET. I have one myself.
@TELEVISIONARCHIVES
6 жыл бұрын
They worked. I still have one in my storage. Macrovision actually worked better for the studios than the copy protection on a dvd.
@Gljin40509
7 жыл бұрын
The best way around macrovision was to buy a GO VIDEO Dual Deck VCR...which I still own one....they had circuitry inside known as AMERICHROME which defeated macrovision.
@anthonyleedickinson3491
5 жыл бұрын
It never got rid of macro vision at all, they where crap. I know of people that had one and tried it. Copy was just as bad.
@PC4USE1
6 жыл бұрын
There were some movies such as "Batman" and "The Cotton Club" where the Macrovision was so strong that it effected the original. So Macrobusters made better copies than the original. Another trick was to rent the movies on VHS and copy them to Beta . No box needed because Sony never bought into the Macrovision scheme.Those were the days.
@Quacks0
4 жыл бұрын
7:47 I have two of these RX-11 devices; I loved them. I always got a kick out of the fact that they "talk out of both sides of their mouths" on the labeling of this device --- it first says the whole huge "WARNING" spiel, yet immediately afterwards shows you the diagram with the unit hooked between the "VCR PLAY" and "VCR RECORD" units, obviously being used to illegally duplicate movies. :P :D
@dave-y8z
7 жыл бұрын
Back in the 80s and 90s as a child. I could only record my favourite movies from free to air TV channels. But it wasn't until 1993 when I got my first Hi-Fi VCR.
@Kylefassbinderful
Жыл бұрын
To get around Macrovision back in the day I would run the composite from the 1st VCR through one of the "video-in" ports on a spare home theater amplifier. Then connect the 2nd VCR to the "video-out" on the amplifier. Worked with DVDs and VHS.
@jonjonas2528
5 жыл бұрын
Use your VHS vcr videorecorders and blank VHS tapes to get even with the news media and tell your friends to just use their vcr videorecorders !
@bobskie321
8 жыл бұрын
I used the old Sony Betamax SL-5400 to get around the Macrovision. What I did was I connected the video out of VHS player that plays the tape to video in of Sony Betamax SL-5400 and the video out of Betamax to video in of another VHS that records the content. But on the back of Betamax there is a PCM switch turn it off but you loose the closed captioned. If you don't turn off the PCM the Macrovision is still there. I tried this same trick many years later when DVD was introduced but didn't work. DVD Macrovision is too strong.
@RiccardoRivi
4 жыл бұрын
well this can come handy when digitalizing old degraded vhs
@trooper9013
5 жыл бұрын
Or you could just get a really old seventies VCR, tho that would put an end to the amazing sound/video quality
@therealjammit
6 жыл бұрын
My method was to take apart the play VCR and tweak the video gain a little higher than normal. The AGC of the record VCR would fix the increased signal level yet still keep the colorburst and sync pulses at the correct size. Bypassed most of the early versions of MacroVision.
@gn33101
6 жыл бұрын
Back in the day I had one of those. :-> An older model though, metal case held shut with screws.
@FennecTECH
4 жыл бұрын
ive got an CRT Television that has a fit over HDCP so i do a very simular thing to use many of my things with that television There were televisions that also had trouble with macrovision too
@lesrogers7310
6 жыл бұрын
The Copymate Deluxe CM-2 was actually the best stabiliser. Cased in steel and equipped with Composite & S-Video connections this was the king of these gadgets but commanded a high price. I still have one somewhere...
@donaldmason4959
5 жыл бұрын
Where can I get one?
@dr666demento
6 жыл бұрын
1:10 Try $100-150 ('85 dollars, $230-350 now). The term at the time was ''priced for rental''. If you didn't return the tape or destroyed it that's what they would bill your credit card for. Very few new releases were even available in general retail, most tapes that were were either old (pre-1950) movies or exercise videos.
@PhirePhlame
5 жыл бұрын
Macrovision Copyguard technically falls under "copy deterrent" due to making the copy unbearable rather than wholesale preventing it from happening. At least, it does when making a _VHS_ copy. DVD recorders react in a way that _does_ make it a full copy protection scheme, however, by refusing to function upon detecting those signal pulses.
@SchardtCinematic
3 жыл бұрын
Grew up with 2 VCRs attached to each other just like that. Except all cables were in the back. Talking early 80s. Before alot of manufacturing started putting the RCA Jack's on the front. But as old VCRs wore out my Dad would buy new ones and it looked more like this. Lol
@austinthevhsvideogamelover5265
9 ай бұрын
Certian older vcrs from the 90s when you are playing something macrovision protected in general can already show the macrovision pattern despite no recording in progress. For example, early 90s panasonic vcrs or mid 90s-early 2000s Funai Vcrs.
@anonamatron
3 жыл бұрын
There must be several generations of macrovision. I remember copying tapes and having them look like the scrambled premium cable channels. Yours looks pretty watchable. If that was all you had, you could deal with that. Also, my dad had some kind of special cable box that unscrambled those channels, probably around 1986 or even earlier. Would that be something similar to this?
@SchardtCinematic
3 жыл бұрын
My Dafs best friend was a videogile and introduced my Dad to video tapes and copying. He was also the first person we knew with a camcorder..... well actually it was a VCR ypu carried on a shoulder strap and a separate camera that connected to it through a cable. It was pretty cool for the late 70s. My Dads friend gave me the first copy of Star Wars on video. He had the original Fox release before there was CV copy protection. I wore that tape out. After he got the Empire Strikes Back. We copied it on right after Star Wars. Back then we copied everything in the Long Play 6 hour mode. So most of my old tapes dont look so.good now.
@jeremycatches9766
3 жыл бұрын
Those 80ies VCRs looked nothing like the ones in this video.. they were very big and heavy and most all of them were top loaders.
@gaymerguy69
Ай бұрын
Those look more like 90s machines. I remember when we bought our 1st DVD player from Sears in 2001, we got a similar looking Sony VCR that was displayed and clearanced tagged for around $200 in the same transaction.
@johneygd
8 жыл бұрын
With the digital video stabelizer you can now use it to record your vcr takes to dvd without having fuzzy lines onscreen.
@eddievhfan1984
7 жыл бұрын
Not quite. Macrovision's 1st-gen copy protection caused involved encoding intense signal spikes in the vertical blanking interval. On the playback deck, this would be ignored and playback would be just fine, but the automatic gain control circuit in the recording deck would try and compensate for those signal spikes, causing the brightness changes throughout playback. Didn't screw with the sync pulses, though; you can still get a coherent picture without lost sync.
@HQA0
6 жыл бұрын
My local rental video store was a knock off shop that used to copy all their movies from blockbuster(wasn't one in my neighborhood) without any protection, i used to think VHS was just crap quality.
@-Steven-
3 ай бұрын
In 1983 (i was still at school and only 15 years old and am from the uk) my aunt gave me a front loading phillips vcr that would record anything thing you threw at it even if it had macrovision, i never understood how it worked as it was just a bog standard vcr, it didnt have any hacks added to it. I had that vcr for over 16 years as i used it for my main play machine as well and it never broke down until finally one day i started to get into these newfangled dvd disk things. I found out later that my parents had thrown it away when they cleaned out the garage, I still think about that vcr all this time later where i would spend many a night copying the latest big blockbuster movies, ahh the good old days before i was forced to become an adult and get a job so i could pay all my hard earned money out on bills etc.
@matthewgibb2640
Жыл бұрын
I didn't see macrovision show up in Australia until 1992-93 with some cbs fox ex rental tapes like White men cant jump. What I found back in the 90's was that by connecting the rf antenna cable from the wall to the first vcr then to the second vcr then to a video game console rf switch box that it got rid of all the dark/light flickering and then a digital signal stabiliser was all that was needed to get crisp copies. Not that I ever sold copies. Later 90s/early 2000's VCR's and DVD players supposedly had macrovision integrated circuits inside them that over rid even the stabiliser boxes ability to clean the image up and would instantly stop recording when it had a macrovision protected tape or disc in it and record was pressed on the second unit whether a dvd recorder or vcr
@eastmolman
8 жыл бұрын
I have one of these I love it. Works for DVDs too!
@mitch19636
8 жыл бұрын
I built a analogue video processor in the 80s / 90s. It replaced the vertical interval and cleaned up the video.
@databits
8 жыл бұрын
+Mitchell McCreath - do you still have the processor?
@mitch19636
8 жыл бұрын
Yep. Use it now and then.
@Teucizapan1969
8 жыл бұрын
I built a few myself. :)
@momzilla9491
5 жыл бұрын
Mitchell, by any chance to you have a schematic for your analogue video processor?
@UnrealVideoDuke
8 жыл бұрын
Over 10 years ago I had to buy that BOX just to watch rented movies. I was using a TV Tuner in my PC.
@BrunBacken
6 жыл бұрын
"The sound quality was fine, it didnt effect the soundquality" Sounds exactly like south parks version of the old guy in pet semetary. Hes in the aspen episode. 4:12
@PRSRECORDS
4 ай бұрын
Beta was not effected by macrovision. Bought the rx2 when it came out. Still use it for stabilizing transfers.
@Madness832
8 жыл бұрын
Back around 1990, my parents had a similar RF-connected device. And believe it or not, we did use it for the intended purpose: to stop the flashing &/or rolling picture, of prerecorded tapes, on our 70's-era telly.
@databits
8 жыл бұрын
+Madness832 - did it work well?
@Madness832
8 жыл бұрын
Yup, did the trick.
@robertyglesias9673
5 жыл бұрын
Yes there was a time I was recording everything then in 1985 tapes were being coded so we could copy films anymore
@Musicradio77Network
5 жыл бұрын
Disney was best known for VHS tapes that contains Macrovision technology. I have a ton of Disney tapes that all have Macrovision process to prevent copy protection.
@gammaboost
4 жыл бұрын
Why do some people end up with a much less stable image when Macrovision is in effect? For example, Technology Connections's video on Macrovision showed crazy effects, such as loosing sync?
@Otokichi786
6 жыл бұрын
Back then, during the 1990's, I overheard a conversation at the local Radio Shack about copying Letterboxed "Raiders of the Lost Ark" to VHS from Laserdisc. As far as I know, Laserdisc players in the North American market didn't have ANY copy protection. In time, I found a Pioneer Laserdisc player and did a test VHS copy; no playback problems whatsoever, and it was in higher audio and video definition! Also, Laserdisc releases, such as "Aliens" were the Special Edition/Complete versions that weren't available on VHS for love or money. When DVD eventually replaced Laserdisc, Mac The Ripper and DVD-R/+R "made video piracy possible." By the way, Copying from VHS or Beta tapes, even at top speed resulted in fuzzy video; each generation was half the quality of the original. (An even better argument for Laserdisc.;)
@und4287
5 жыл бұрын
Laserdisc don't have copy protection because it was considered a premium format.
@walterbennet9898
3 жыл бұрын
I've got a problem, one VHS (1998) at almost the end of the recording, it starts to have some noise in the image, then the sound starts to pitch up and image is having more noise and finally black and white image with high pitch sound and the end (with a drastic pitch down and image turns into "snow noise')
@Pyrolonn
6 жыл бұрын
We never felt the need to duplicate rental movies. For one thing we only had one VCR and we'd typically just rent them and watch them. Once you've seen it do you really really need to see it again? It was actually quite festive, we'd make popcorn buy some candy or pop at the neighboring store to the video rental and have a fun night in.
@robertknight4672
5 жыл бұрын
I have two box sets of the original Star Wars trilogy on VHS. The wide screen one has copy protection, the full screen doesn't.
@Shermanbay
6 жыл бұрын
Apparently 8mm tape was impervious to Macrovision, as I was able to copy hundreds of VHS tapes direct to 8mm (normal and Hi-8) without any problems or signal degradation.
@meetoo594
6 жыл бұрын
@hillbilly tech: I think it messed with the auto gain control rather than the tracking, hence the messed up colours and brightness. Older VCRs just didn't have AGC. I had a vcr without auto-tracking and macrovision still worked to mess up copies no matter what you did with the tracking knob.
@devilzwishbone
5 жыл бұрын
Im sure others have already commented but this is an extremely mild example, vertical holding was the main issue, causing it to roll uncontrollably and the video colours altered as stated sometimes even sound became slightly off key tho sound wasnt usually affected. Would of been handy to onow this as a teenager when i did copy rentals but today its outdated
@EDP2000
5 жыл бұрын
I used to own a bootleg copy of Back To The Future on VHS, recorded alongside Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, and Back To The Future had the same Macrovision problems. Fortunately, Temple Of Doom wasn't affected by Macrovision.
@randyharrigan4790
4 жыл бұрын
I got a more modern version of this video stabilizer off ebay about 10 years ago. Mine is made by dimax and also has a s-video input and requires no battery. It cost me about 70$ and i need it to go from VHS to DVD-R because dvd recorders won't even let you start recording when macrovision is detected.
@heatscore9407
5 жыл бұрын
I can't find this on ebay. .😢😢😢😢 I bought a copy of purple people eaters from eBay (20$+20 s/h) and was going to simply record onto an old DVD recorder that I've had for like ten yrs and never used once but was in for rude awakening lol so I've come to KZitem. I'm very grateful for your upload thank you. But am sad that I can't find any units on ebay lol
@savagestarlight5644
6 жыл бұрын
You prices are a little conservative. I remember mid to late 80’s movies averaging around $100. My friends and actually were able to copy VHS all the way up to the DMCA around 2000-01 We experimented with certain brands that didn’t comply. I believe Zenith was a copy-friendly brand. I was also able to copy dvd without macro vision. It was a fun time.
@dirkgriggs3353
4 жыл бұрын
RCA was another great "copy-friendly" brand all the way up until about 1997-98 and had produced some solid mid to high end VHS/SVHS editing units (check out legacy models VR740HF, VR700HF, VR685HF, etc. ) There were quite a bit of models conveniently "out of spec" with the JVC licensed standard up until about 1990-91 (i.e. Panasonic) that could properly record the altered signal. It was probably caused a different value of a resistor or capictor in the destination deck; it did not remove the protection, it only made the copying possible. Apparently, some early (late 1970s and possibly thereafter) RCA VCRs were manufactured by Matsushita (parent company of Panasonic, Quasar, Technics) although mid to late 1990s RCA models did not contain similar circuitry as their Panasonic counterparts despite other shared design aspects. The DMCA mandated that all VCR have AGC circuitry that recognized the protection which is why later model VCR's only engage that circuit when you press record so that you could pass the signal through if it was not being copied.
@momzilla9491
5 жыл бұрын
SOURCE = Player VCR RECORDER = Recording VCR 1. Audio Out (Red & White) on SOURCE Player to Audio In on RECORDER 2. Video Stabilizer Out (Yellow) to Video In (Yellow) on RECORDER 3. Video Stabilizer In (Yellow) to SOURCE Player (Yellow) Out Does this sound correct? Thanks!!!!!
@boogiedaddy3434
6 жыл бұрын
Nice video, but Macrovision was not nearly as common as you claim. As someone who worked in a video store from 1988-1999 and made countless copies, I guarantee that nowhere close to 99% of tapes were protected. In fact, less than a third did. That number decreased even further as second prints came out and the extra money wasn't invested in protecting later prints.
@markmarkofkane8167
6 жыл бұрын
It's great for VHS versions you can't get on any other format.
@tookeydookey
2 жыл бұрын
I bought one of these in late 2012 on eBay for $35, worth every penny! I had some Disney tapes at the time that haven't got released to DVD, and this worked just fine for me! Now I use this to stabilize picture when digitizing tapes. Here's a probably stupid question: Does this have a Time Base Corrector? Just curious. Thanks!😁🖒
@littlehershey213
Жыл бұрын
How did you get locked vhs to dvd? Did you copy the vhs to vhs and then the unlocked vhs copy to DVD?
@sharptoothtrex4486
5 жыл бұрын
Even my favorite Ellen Barkin 1991 movie Switch is a hard VHS tape to fine, even in any thrift store I try.
@TechCarnivore1
3 жыл бұрын
Hey, thanks for this video. I am about to travel to the 80's and this will be a great help.
@erin19030
4 жыл бұрын
I built a two transistor amplifier that restored the vertical sync. Then they came up with a more complicated system. RCA made a portable digital VCR that automatically defeated the copy protection.
@darkprecursorplaythroughs1214
Жыл бұрын
What was it called
@johnrickard8512
6 жыл бұрын
Those devices found a second use in the early 2000s for people who used their VCRs as input switchers for their shiny new DVD player. They have a habit of putting out a copy protection signal that messes with lower quality units which these things get rid of.
@Dedicatedtolivinginthepast
Жыл бұрын
Or you could use an older VCR from about the late 70s or so, It wasn't all that uncommon to see them even in 86 and they would just record the Macrovision without any problems! Sometime, I want to test all of my VCRs for that ability to record even on a Macrovision signal!
@Dedicatedtolivinginthepast
Жыл бұрын
@@JustinGittings Oh, I didn't know that later VCRs like that wouldn't have problems like that as well! Although I'm pretty sure late VCRs like that are pretty few and far between
@Dedicatedtolivinginthepast
Жыл бұрын
@@JustinGittings Well, If I ever come across an RCA VCR that looks like it's from that time period then I will try pirating stuff with it lol
@Boney_M
4 жыл бұрын
good old days....i remember using scart cable to copy vhs...my beautifull childhood
@jr-pl9kj
2 жыл бұрын
i had a few vcrs that where immune to macrovision, plus where would one buy that device back in the day, nowadays its all over the internet.
@TheBudgie29
6 жыл бұрын
I am In the UK and Me and a Friend got In on the Ground with VHS. We would drive around the Big Estate just up the road with a Car full of the Latest Releases and Machines If they didn't have one. All for Rent for the Evening with a pick up the Next day and they could choose another film. I would go to a Shop that had a Back gate entrance and up to a Oversized Garden Shed. That was full of the Latest Releases This was only way You could get them before Retail and Blockbusters. I would Hire all the New ones for that Week. Go Home and Record them on Multiple Video Machines. So We would have 10 Copy's of the Latest Movies from one Tape. Then after the Film became Old and No one was Renting It We would Have a Big Sale. Every time We were Making more Money than We could cope with. Then others cottoned on and then there were too many doing It. So We switched to the Brand New CD Video Market and It all began again Only this time I could Make Hundreds of Copy's with No lost of Quality. Amazing Times. Oh Yes the Price of Brand New Video's In the UK at that Time was £50 up to £90's a Lot of money back Then. Machines could cost as much as £500 each. And to Hire the Movies was just £3.50 Each You do the Math.
@karlbishop9670
3 жыл бұрын
I still have a crt portable tv with built in vhs player. It does remove macrovision bizzarely enabling it to copy clearly. But it only plays mono sound.
@mclovinpo
7 ай бұрын
Thanks just found a set of two of these on eBay!
@robertyglesias9673
5 жыл бұрын
Yes I bought that took me a while to hook it up and it really worked
@digjunk3d
5 ай бұрын
And how did you come across such a device? - you'd go to your local 5 and dime and pick up a magazine like Premiere or Movieline and check out their classifieds. I picked up one in the early 90's..As a side note, the first movie I saw with macrovision I believe was 1984's "The Cotton Club"
@assamiugi
5 жыл бұрын
Hey man, great presentation. I was wondering can I use that video stabilizer as TBC (Time base corrector). Will it fix the dropping frame issue of digitilazing the VHS tapes to my computer. Do you have any expirience of that?
@FerintoshFarmsPhotography
6 жыл бұрын
Damn, i had a feeling it was run by the magic of a young girls heart inside of there.
@patrickneary8446
5 жыл бұрын
In the late ‘90’s, my local rental store was raided for renting copies since they started. I guess it took 15 years to get caught
@janquinn261
5 жыл бұрын
Well, shoot! And I have now replaced my old movies on VHS to DVD by buying them at whatever store was selling them. Granted, I began collecting movies on beta tapes in 1979. So, I have replaced them on VHS, then again on DVD. And, by the time I re-purchased them, they were way less expensive.
@januzi2
6 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the info. I'm gonna copy a lot of movies and sell them at the flea market.
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