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The History of Camcorders
Today’s camcorders are very compact and can fit in the palm
of your hand. You can stick them in your pocket or purse. No matter
where you are, on a plane, on a beach, in your house or on a mountaintop,
it is easy to create your own high quality video productions.
Modern camcorders provide outstanding visual and audio capture qualities,
are small enough to travel anywhere, and have impressive lens and zoom
ratios. Most provide a wide range of automatic and manual imaging modes,
as well as a variety of input and output selections. Editing is easy.
You can edit from camcorder to camcorder, you can use a dedicated editing
box, or you can dump your video into your computer and edit using nonlinear
technology. Soon you will be able to send your videos from your camcorder
directly to the Internet.
But it wasn’t always like that. When I, and many other “old”
videographers started shooting video, there really was no such thing
as mobile video. Television show producers used large quad decks (about
the size of refrigerator lying on its back) to record video onto 2-inch
wide videotape. Then, as the seventies rolled around, these monster
machines evolved into smaller suitcase sized machines that used one
inch or ¾ inch videotape to record video. When you wanted to
do a location shoot, you drove a truck full of the equipment, or lugged
the decks, cameras, switching devices, tripods, and cables to the location
and set it up.
Even worse, in those days, the cameras were using electronic tubes
to convert the light to electrical impulses, not solid state CCDs. Not
only did the tubes burnt out from use, they needed to be constantly
adjusted, calibrated and babied. Even during a shoot, the cameras needed
constant attention. As the tubes warmed up during a show, the Colours
would constantly shift and the tubes would wiggle out of alignment and
would require re-configuring every hour or so. In addition, the tubes
were not as light sensitive as today’s camcorders and chip cameras.
You had to pour LOTS of light onto the subjects to get a picture. It
got hot very fast.
According to Rik Albury who was doing video back in the early sixties
at the University of Florida, “Mobile for us was dolly-trucking
large cameras around the studio as far as our cables could reach.”
Albury adds that there were no such things as editing decks or nonlinear
editing systems. He had to edit the two-inch wide videotapes by using
razor blades and scotch tape. The editor had to manually roll the tape
back and forth across the video heads to find the right spot, make a
crayon mark, and then physically cut the tape into sections and scotch
tape it back together. If he was lucky, the editor was able to get the
slice between the electronic frames. If not, he got bad glitches and
image rolling and had to do it again. There was a special solution that
could be applied to the tape that would let the editors sort of see
where the magnetic particles were so that they could cut between them.
Another early mobile video innovators was Walt Rauffer who is now
with the Sesame Street Workshop. Back in 1962, Walt cut a 3” tube
B&W Pye orthicon camera into two pieces to make it a bit mobile.
According to Walt, “We used it to shoot beer commercials for the
networks and edited on 2 inch wide quad tape using a razor blade.”
According to Rick Diehl of LabGuysWorld, an online museum of old video
gear, the first home video system was offered by Ampex in 1963. Advertised
in the Neiman Marcus Christmas catalog, this system included a big camera,
TV monitor, special furniture and was based around a 100-pound Ampex
VR-1500 video recorder. Available for just $30,000, an Ampex engineer
would come out to your home and set it up for you.
Handheld Video?
Prior to the introduction of the Portapak, there was no such thing
as handheld video cameras. Most professional mobile and location work
was shot on 16mm film. Home users who wanted to document their parties
and special events had to use 8mm or Super8 film.
Loading a 8mm film camera required opening it up and threading in
the film and not exposing it by mistake. When you were done shooting
the brief 3 minutes of film, without any sound, you had to rewind it
inside the camera, carefully take it out and put it in a special light
proof canister, and then send it off to be developed. When you got it
back in a week or so, you had to pull out your 8mm film projector and
set it up in front of a big blank white wall or set up a projection
screen. Then after threading the film onto the reels through the projector’s
series of gears and pulleys, you could finally watch it back. Hopefully
your projector was in good shape or you might rip or melt your precious
film.
Some engineers and producers were experimenting with mobile video,
creating their own camera and videotape recorder packs. Perry Mitchell,
reports that he created his own portable kit by slicing apart the camera
head and camera control unit (CCU) into two separate pieces, attaching
the CCU to a backpack and lugging that around. SEE PICTURE. The fifty-pound
videotape recorder unit was then mounted on another backpack and was
connected to the CCU backpack by a thick cable.
Things began to Get Better
In 1967, Sony introduced the first PortaPak, the Sony DV-2400 Video
Rover. The first ”portable” video system, this two-piece
set consisted of a large B&W camera and a separate record-only helical
½” VCR unit. It required a Sony CV series VTR to play back
the video. Even thought it was clunky and heavy, it was light enough
for a single person to carry it around. However, it was usually operated
by a crew of two - One shot the camera and one carried and operated
the VCR part.
Unlike today’s camcorders and video-recorders that use videocassettes
and cartridges, helical is like an old reel-to-reel tape recorder but
a bit more complicated. The tape spun off of one reel, carefully threaded
it around the erase, video and audio heads, and then onto the pick-up
reel. It was easy to make a mistake or not get the tape tight enough.
The camera was a bit funky too. It had a single tube B&W vidicon
camera that had a few problems. If you moved the camera too fast, the
images would smear. You couldn’t point the camera at the sun or
bright lights or you would burn a permanent hole in the tube.
Soon after, other manufacturers like Panasonic and JVC began making
and selling their own portapaks as well. As time went on, the cameras
got better and better, smaller and smaller. The tubes got more durable
and soon added Colour capabilities.
Even more importantly, editing improved. No longer did the helical
tape have to be physically cut and taped back together. New insert and
assembly editing technologies allowed editors to record electronically
from deck to deck. At first, this was manual.
You had to learn how long it took your decks to come up to speed and
then manually backwind them the correct distance, hit play and then,
at the right moment, hit record to make an edit. Sometimes you would
get a good edit, sometimes you wouldn’t. I remember going back
and forth on a single edit five times or more to get a stable edit that
would fall between the video frames and would be stable, without any
flagging, wiggling or jiggle.
In the early seventies, time code began appearing on professional
editing decks and this greatly improved ease of editing. Not only could
you lock in the frame number, you could also accurately do the required
pre-rolls.
By the way, even with the improvements in the cameras, recorders and
editing techniques, they were still capturing component analog video.
This meant that every time you made a dub or copy for editing, you lost
image quality and resolution. In addition, these were two piece units
– a camera with tube inside and separate recorder unit.
The Impact of Mobile Video and Personal Video
The Sony Portapak, and other portable video gear from JVC and Panasonic
that followed it, revolutionized the video business and opened up video
to the masses, making it a medium that anyone could use. No longer was
video and television limited to major networks or to those with big
budgets.
This created an explosion of what became known as “guerilla
video” and video art. In the late sixties and early seventies,
the streets were exploding with counter culture and politics. Many people
used these portable camcorders to document the times around them. Video
artists like Nam June Paik used portapaks to create “artistic”
programs that didn’t have to have a story, just images and emotion
and sound. As a side note, Nam June Paik is often credited with purchasing
the very first portapak, from the very first Sony shipment.
These new portapaks were also grabbed up by businesses of all sizes
and types, athletic departments at schools and universities, and government
agencies, including the military. Even psychologists were quick to pick
up on the implications of videotaping sessions that could be played
back later for review.
In the early seventies, I purchased my first Portapak, a Panasonic
3085. Aside from a few goofy video art exercises, I was soon heavily
immersed in the counterculture and politics, documenting street art,
guerilla theater and traveling to various protests and events. During
the time of protests against nuclear plants, I recall marching up the
beach, taping the protesters, and as they swarmed closer to the reactors,
climbing over a 8 foot high chain link fence, lugging the 30 pound Portapak
and camera.
In addition to Portapaks being big and unwieldy, the batteries were
primitive and didn't last as long as they do now. Tobe Carey, a documentary
producer living and working in Woodstock, NY, lugged his heavy Sony
AV-3400 Portapak down to the Yucatan area of Mexico to shoot a video
documenting the process of giving birth in a hammock. As part of the
shoot, he had to climb up on top of a hut to document the making of
a traditional thatched roof.
Not only did he have to precariously balance on the roof, he had to
drape the VCR unit with a white cloth to keep the hot Mayan sun from
depleting the batteries. The documentary was shot in 1971, edited over
the next two-years and finally played at the First Global Village Video
Festival in NY City in 1974. Cablecasting the tape was not easy either.
Instead of just giving the finished tape to the local cable company
to play, he had to lug his Sony Portapak to the cable station’s
head end located in a small concrete block building at the end of a
mountain dirt road. There he had to physically connect the portapak's
video outputs to the cable company's channel-3 modulator. Then he hit
play and reels began to revolve.
Various groups used these Portapaks to create their own counter-cultural
TV programs. Groups like the Ant Farm, Videofreex and Top Value Television
produced hundreds of hours of productions. Some of these were documentaries
of the times; others were bitter satires and comments on society. Ken
Shapiro (no relation) used portapaks to produce a show called Channel
One. It consisted of short video segments that were then played back
to an audience in a theatre setting. This series of vicious comedy sketches
parodying TV evolved to become the hit movie, “The Groove Tube”
that starred Chevy Chase, Richard Belzer, Paul Bartel and Carrie Fisher.
Broadcasters also embraced these mobile technologies. Prior to the
introduction of portapaks, most TV news was shot on 16mm film. After
developing and editing, it was run through a video projector device
called a telecine that broadcast it over the air. By using these mobile
video cameras and recorders, broadcast news organizations were able
to go into the field and get news as it happened. As the technology
improved, TV news mostly abandoned film and moved to video.
In 1971, Sony introduced their new U-Matic concept to the world. A
single cassette, with ¾ inch wide tape, it made loading the tape
much easier. Just stick the tape cartridge in and the machine did the
rest. Most of the time. The first units were large table sized machines,
but they got smaller, and eventually become portable enough to be carried
by a production crew.
At the same time, Sony and JVC were working on smaller ½”
formats for home users. Sony’s product was called Betamax. JVC’s
was called VHS. Both used videocassettes similar to the larger U-Matic.
These units used 2 hour length VHS cassettes that were much easier to
quickly insert and remove than the older helical VTRs with their 20
and 30 minute tape reels. In 1976, JVC finally introduced Colour VHS
to the world.
As soon as I could, I jettisoned my old B&W Sony Portapak for
the new VHS Colour format. Even though they were lot easier to use and
not as bulky, these were still two-piece units, with a Colour camera
with a built-in microphone and a separate VCR unit, connected via a
cable. I remember, dragging mine around to concerts and events, documenting
the politics of the time and early stirrings of the punk rock movement.
According to the Consumer Electronics Association, in 1982, both JVC
and Sony announced the “CAMera/recorder”, or camcorder,
combinations. On June 1, 1982, JVC’s camcorder used its new mini-VHS
format, VHS-C. In Japan five months later, Sony announced its Betamovie
Beta camcorder, which was promoted with the slogan "Inside This
Camera Is A VCR." The first Betamovie camcorder hit stores in May
1983. It was a record only machine without an electronic viewfinder.
In February 1984, photo giant Kodak introduced a new camcorder format,
8mm, in its first 8mm camcorder, the KodaVision 2000. In 1985, Sony
introduced the first chip-based camcorders. Called Video 8, it was also
Sony’s first 8mm camcorder. The same year, JVC introduced VHS-C,
a compact version of VHS cassettes. The next year, 1989, JVC introduced
S-VHS. Still analog video, it provided it separated the video signal
into two distinct channels. This provided better Colour and higher resolution,
about 400 lines compared to VHS at 220 lines. This higher resolution
enables users to actually edit and copy their videos without worrying
that their second and third generation tapes would be fuzzy. About the
same time, Sony also joined the s-video movement and introduced their
first Hi8 camcorder, the venerable CCD-V99 camcorder.
In 1992, Sharp became the first company to build in a Colour LCD screen
to replace the conventional viewfinder. In fact, their LCD screen was
basically the entire camera with the lens assembly hanging off of it.
No longer did users have to squint through a tiny eyepiece. This has
become a standard feature of almost every consumer camcorder. Finally,
today’s digital video technology first arrived in late 1995. Panasonic
and Sony brought out the first Digital Video camcorders, soon followed
by Sharp and JVC.
Today’s new camcorders incorporate the best of the evolution.
Small and compact, large LCD viewfinders and high quality Digital Video
recording. Go anywhere, shoot anywhere. What’s next? Maybe batteries
that last for days? No more videotape and the ability to record directly
to flash memory? Wireless video recording directly to the Internet?
Camcorders built into your head and biologically connected to your optic
nerves? Who knows? One thing can be guaranteed though, in another 20
years, your cool and hip digital camcorder, will be looked at as nothing
more than a quaint and cute heirloom of primitive times.