If you mean a digital TV converter, yes it will record to a VCR. It's no more complicated than recording from cable or satellite TV.
No. Unlike digital media, once a VHS tape is erased, it's gone for good.
DVD means Digital Video Disc. The Video on the Disc is there because of Digital imprint, as compared to a VHS. A Video on a tape.
A con of a VHS tape is that it is big and takes up a lot of room to store. A pro of a VHS tape is that the tape is protected by a cover.
Usually it depends, but it could be anywhere from 0.25 GB to 4.5GB. Most of the time, it is about 3.5-4.5GB. The amount of data (let's say the data is a movie) should be able to fit both on a VHS tape and DVD, if the compression ratio is acceptable. Many people say you can fit more data (video) on a VHS than a DVD. This almost all the time not true. A DVD stores data digitally, while a VHS tape does so in an analog format. Digital data takes up more "space", but has better "quality", in general terms. Hope this was enough, because that's all I know for sure. David
You can mail in VHS or mini-Dv tapes to companies like YesVideo.com, and pay about $20 per tape to have them converted. You could also purchase a cable to connect your VHS player or camcorder to your computer, ranging from about $35 to $80, load the video onto your computer, and burn what you capture to DVD.
Use 2 VCR's then push record then stop if its done RIP VHS tape 1976-2009
Most new video recorders are now digital due to better quality and demand. However some manufactors do offer non digital versions. A2 All recorders that use discs or hard drives are digital by their very nature. VHS tape machines used an analogue system of recording onto tape. There are a few of these still available, but are rapidly drying up.
Video Home System, better known as VHS, is a video tape recording standard developed during the 1970s.
Converting VHS tapes to DVD can be done by first connecting the VCR to a camcorder using a cable with three plugs on each end or a cable with three plugs on one end and one plug on the other, depending on the number of inputs on the camcorder. When the VHS tape is played, it can be recorded by the camcorder onto a miniDV tape. Then the contents of the miniDV tape need to be downloaded to a computer, and then burned onto a DVD.
yes, find a player for your digital video (probably your digital video camera) and it should have an analogue output, usually a yellow video cable which you can plug into the back of a VCR. Unless you want to record a digital signal onto a VHS cassette, and the simple answer to that is no.
If the tape will fit into a camcorder, there is no reason why a copyright tape won't play. Many VHS camcorders use small cassette bodies and a standard commercial VHS tape simply won't fit.
how do I get a stuck vhs out of the vcr????