This is the Sony BVH 500 Video Recorder


I’ve Never Seen Anything Remotely Like This! Take A Look!

This is the Sony BVH 500 one inch, portable video tape recorder. Notice that the tape reels are stacked on top of each other! One reel spins one way and the other reel spins the other way! Amazing!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TEdGo1eGYEw

http://www.thegeekgroup.org – Chris and Kidwell investigate and old Sony Reel to Reel VTR. They explore the different parts, figure how to load the tape, and…

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25 Comments

  1. Bill Shrode October 8, 2013

    I always loved how they, (RCA, IVC, Ampex, Sony) all used the word “portable” so loosely. I suppose it referred to anything that didn’t have at least 1 rack of support gear attached. But seriously… 3M used the same type of transport system in their 93/94 series background/foreground (read “elevator) music players prior to switching to the “Fidelapak” style cartridge format.

  2. Philippe-Louis Martin October 7, 2013

    i use Ampex VPR 3

  3. David Fell October 7, 2013

    I think we used these in college; mid 1970s.

  4. Stephen Bires October 7, 2013

    @Bill June 14, 2010. Knew him well.

  5. William Koeppen October 6, 2013

    Huh! strange looking thing, was that something grandpa used?

  6. Stephen Taylor October 6, 2013

    I used one. Funny that now a canon 5D is Broadcast Quality!

  7. Mike Formby October 6, 2013

    Try threading that after a few beers.

  8. Chuck Conrad October 6, 2013

    I have a Hitachi HR-100 in my collection which is very similar. It sure does weigh a lot!

  9. Howard Malley October 6, 2013

    One of the biggest believers in this format and did thousands of shows using this was Starfax run by a brilliant man who has sadly passed–Ron Stutzman.

  10. Craig Fisher October 6, 2013

    Oh buddy, do I remember lugging that thing around!

  11. Roger A Summers October 6, 2013

    I think I saw this when I was looking for a Revox reel to reel.

  12. William Pettigrew October 6, 2013

    It seems like these guys are doing a lot of speculating. Pretty funny.

  13. Darryl Coleman October 6, 2013

    Load them with batteries and carry one for a half hour. You had to be a strong man.

  14. Richard Pizzoni October 6, 2013

    AHHH its a SONY 500. what a nightmare to fix… Ate battery too If I remember.

  15. Mark Gulbrandsen October 6, 2013

    We had a BVH-500 at the station I worked at. It was only used as a back up. It had no TBC but it had full interchangeability for playback on the BVH-1000’s we also had and the images off it looked fine.

  16. John J. Roche October 6, 2013

    I master many shows on those. The unitel ( now Denali) trucks had at most 5ks on board. I would have 10 of those hanging on hooks on the wall., I could unload/ reload on about 39 seconds. At the end of the show you would be putting tapes back on original source reels for hours!

  17. Dave Wertheimer October 6, 2013

    I had to schlep one on a few shoots for WMVS in 1984 with a TK 76!

  18. Pierre Seguin October 6, 2013

    I used Hitachi HR-100

  19. Joe Reaves October 6, 2013

    Used this one and the Ampex model back in the mid-80’s.

  20. Frank Berry October 6, 2013

    It did make good recordings. It was designed as a recorder … not as a player. It had only the most basic playback capabilities.

  21. Shirley Gastmann October 6, 2013

    See them? I used to repair them. And once… I was the video tape operator that had to change reels mid flight in a helicopter with the doors off. Now that was fun, trying to thread the tape blowing in the wind. Actually was a very good recorder. No time base corrector though.

  22. Tom Shustack October 6, 2013

    I can remember having to “stand by” while we change the reel… Time to check the pager for calls.

  23. Jay Hartigan October 6, 2013

    Why couldn’t they find one of us that actually used this recorder all over the country for years to do this demo. These guys had no business showing the fine recorder. I still have one in my basement.

  24. Frank Berry October 6, 2013

    Ampex VPR 20 was the same. Reels stacked.

  25. John Luff October 6, 2013

    There is no copy protection on 1″ type C recorders. They simply don’t understand the technology…terrible misinformation…