Hello, what exactly does eigentlch the 16:9 function on a VCR (VHS)?
I just used a new concern (SonySLV-SE720D), and 16:9 in the menu can be "a", "off" or "auto". In the instructions says is that it is designed for 16:9 widescreen TVs, which in turn would pass the function that is not there.
I see no differences, no preference what setting I choose. Have a tube TV (4:3) and a TFT (16:10-PC monitor connected with video connections).
Antwort von tommyb:
Maybe that would only work with matching VHS tapes (Greetings from anamorphic recording).
Only I know that in fact, almost ANY movie on VHS was always gecroppt to 4:3. Thanks to the automation of this process can sometimes be had at a Cinemascope movie (21:9) of an image in which we have not seen anyone, because the actors very far left or far right standing.
But ... moment ... VHS and 16:9? Wayne! We have 2010: D
Antwort von actaion:
"TommyB" wrote:
Only I know that in fact, almost ANY movie on VHS was always gecroppt to 4:3.
Previously usually yes, but pay later (with no longer the wide-screen TVs). I have a few here synonymous soweiso in 16:9, udn own Aufnahemn uasm TV.
"TommyB" wrote:
Maybe that would only work with matching VHS tapes (Greetings from anamorphic recording).
Gibts on VHS ever since anamorphic recording?
My problem is the dasss 62cm TFT currently rules do not zoom, but apart only 4:3 or 16:9 (dominates), so I just get a picture with bars s.allen four sides, or a distorted picture with still bar at the top And towards the bottom ...
Antwort von JMS Productions:
"TommyB" wrote:
Thanks to the automation of this process can sometimes be had at a Cinemascope movie (21:9) of an image in which we have not seen anyone, because the actors very far left or far right standing.
Pan & Scan Greetings from? : P
Antwort von beiti:
Quote:
Gibts on VHS ever since anamorphic recording?
It was intended that has been used in practice, but as good as ever. The idea was that the recorder receives an anamorphic signal, a corresponding additional info onto tape and then writes in the car a shift playback signal s.der Television sends. In practice, the great never enforced because buying cassettes were made for compatibility reasons only in 4:3 letterbox, and then was synonymous already made the 16:9 and the DVD-VHS standard redundant.
As an island solution could be in the VHS-DVD transition, of course, using private, for example, if you wanted to copy DVDs as possible to S-VHS.