On Sun, 23 Feb 2003 18:38:17 -0500, "Francois
Arsenault" <francoisa@sympatico.ca> wrote:
>Can anyone direct me to an online store that offers
80-min MiniDV tapes that
>I can order in Canada for a reasonable price? I can't
seem to find any
>around here (I live in Quebec City), and while I've
managed to get in
>contact with a couple of potential sources, the prices
were prohibitive.
>Those things are really expensive!
>
>I'd order from the United States, but I'm having a hard
time finding a
>vendor that ships to Canada, and the exchange rate is
far from advantageous.
>Not to mention shipping costs and delivery time.
www.taperesources.com is good, as is www.tapeguys.com, with
Sony PR 80-min tape about $10 US each...
>By the way, how reliable are 80-min tapes, anyway? Based
on what I've read
>it seems it's better to use 80-min tapes in SP than to
use the LP mode of
>standard 60/90 tapes. I understand the latter can lead
to dropped frames and
>some incompability (like the tapes may not work in
machines other than the
>camcorder that shot the footage). But how good are
80-min tapes? Are they
>worth the price or would I risk losing my precious
footage ewith repeated
>use? Are there any picture quality issues?
With normal use, I have had good luck with both 80 minute
tapes
and LP-mode (with Sony cameras, which appear to have
better alignment than others, and LP-mode record/play has
had good compatibility among about a dozen Sony camcorders).
>See, I need to produce VHS videos using a MiniDV tape as
the source. Since
>switching MiniDV tapes in the middle of a dubbing job is
a pain, as well as
>not the most aesthetic option, I prefer to make sure
each of my videos fits
>on a single source tape. But the 60-min limit (more like
62, really) of a
>60/90 tape's SP mode forces me to make tough decisions
during the editing
>process. I would very much like to be able to produce
videos that are longer
>than 62 minutes. I don't dare use the 90-min LP mode.
Using 80-min tapes
>seems like a good alternative in theory. But can they be
used for repeated
>dubbing without getting damaged? For instance, there's
one video that I've
>used to make over 70 VHS copies so far. No sign of
damage so far. Can an
>80-min tape do the same without failing me? Can I buy
some for a reasonable
>price?
They are about $10/tape in US (www.taperesources.com), but
I would NEVER put a single important master through 70
plays!!! Better solutions: make a set of masters of the
edit from the computer; use the services of an excellent
tape-duping house for VHS copies (these can be better than
we mere mortals can produce [www.e-kmedia.com], and nearly
as cheap), making camera-to-camera FireWire dub tapes
specifically for their use (keeping the original master
copies in your possession...).