My experience is in the field of bed bugs, and to that, I will tell you that it is possible to get rid of bed bugs in papers and vhs tapes. Depending on your location, there are two products available that are likely to help you, Nu-Van Pest strips, and a product called No Pest strips. The strips can be placed into a sealed container with the items (I suggest a garbage bag with all openings duct taped shut), and kept sealed for 30-45 days. During this time the strips, which contain a pesticide, will attract and kill any bed bugs hiding in the items. I am not certain if the same process would work for mites, though I have heard it will.
Yes you can gerammaticly have a whole collection of vhs tapes
No Japanese VHS tapes are real not pirated
Yes Japanese VHS tapes are real they are not fake and not pirated
The normal lifespan of VHS tapes is 8-10 years.
You can use VHS converters to transfer movies from your old VHS tapes to your home PC. This makes you able to get rid of your stack of VHS tapes and backup everything digitally.
Ya here in NJ they will pick up VHS tapes in the recycleing.
yes. all the components in a VHS are plastic. plastics are to be recylcled.
very
Transfering your VHS tapes to DVD is a great idea.
A vhs to dvd recorder may help you conver your vhs tapes to dvd media if you have the right system. I advise you to check with the salesperson before you buy anything.
Considering the novelty of VHS tapes and their considerable Hipster appeal, the best place to purchase black VHS tapes is from a thrift store. However, sites such as EBay and Amazon provide secondary options for the less discerning hipster.
Yes, using a VHS-C adapter will allow you to record and play VHS-C tapes in a VHS machine. The adapter simply changes the casing format. The actual tape is the same. I'm not sure why you would want to, though. VHS tapes are cheaper and the tapes are longer.