These films were released between 1984 to 1994 and have the black diamond on the case or on the tape. The tapes could be worth anywhere from $50 to $250.
The first sign that you might have a collectible VHS on your hands is if it were a part of the Disney "Black Diamond Collection." These tapes were released between 1984 and 1994. The diamond can be found on the spine of the case or printed directly on the tape.
The Black Diamond edition refers to the diamond-shaped 'The Classics' logo on the upper spine of each Disney VHS clamshell case. Disney movies in the Black Diamond Collection were released between 1984 and 1994 and include titles like Dumbo, The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, and more.
The value of cassette tapes varies based on the popularity of the band, the age, and whether or not the music was professionally recorded. Cassette tapes from popular bands are, predictably, more marketable than others. If you've got some Bowie or Def Leppard, you may be in luck!
Betamax is obsolete, having lost the videotape format war to VHS. Despite this, Betamax recorders were not discontinued until August 2002. Betamax cassettes were available until March 2016, when Sony stopped making and selling them, alongside MicroMV.
All of the video machines in use and all of the pre-recorded movies were Betamax. It had a de facto monopoly, and an element of lock-in (because of tape incompatibilities). It lost because, at the time, it could not do what consumers wanted: record a whole movie unattended.
Some old VHS tapes fetch real money because they're hard to find, or fans are especially nostalgic about the film. You could also get some money from your old tapes of Disney movies if they are Black Diamond editions, which were the original series of VHS tapes released between 1984 and 1994.
The main determining factor between Betamax and VHS was the cost of the recorders and recording time. Betamax is, in theory, a superior recording format over VHS due to resolution (250 lines vs. 240 lines), slightly superior sound, and a more stable image; Betamax recorders were also of higher-quality construction.
the studios would sell the vhs tapes to rental stores for high prices because they knew the rental places would pay for it and regular people wouldn't. then later after a few months they'd put out a regular retail copy which was the same tape but for a lower price for consumers. the quality was the same.
VHS tapes stopped being produced in 2008, and Panasonic stopping selling VCRs in 2012. Blockbuster went out of business, and then Netflix and other streaming platforms entered the scene.
I was still working at Record Bar on the much anticipated day that Dirty Dancing was commercially released on VHS tape. List price: nearly $100.
The lion's share of VCRs in the market play VHS tapes. In practical terms, there is not a lot of difference between VHS and VCR. VHS is a videotape cassette format, and VCR is actually the name for a type of player.
It was the first fully transistorized VCR. Ampex and RCA followed in 1965 with their own reel-to-reel monochrome VTRs priced under US$1,000 for the home consumer market.
Cost of a Sears VCR in 1981: $1389.88, or 187.3 hours of work (23.4 days or 4.7 weeks) at the average hourly wage of $7.42 (total private industries). Cost of a Sears VCR/DVD combo in 2009: $74.99 or 4hours of work at the current average hourly wage of $18.74.
In the 1970s and early 1980s, there was a format war in the home video industry. Two of the standards, VHS and Betamax, received the most media exposure.
Walmart. sells VCRs! Just not in their stores, so do not go down to the electronics department and ask to see their VCR selection. Walmart has expanded their website to allow partners to sell products as well, and Dealing Fair appears to be the retailer selling VCRs through Walmarts website.
''The VCR that we sell for $250 today is far better than the one we sold in 1976 for $1,300,'' says Lufkin.
The first video cassette recorder, or what is popularly known as the VCR, was sold by Sony in 1971. Its existence was made possible by the advances Ginsburg and his team made in the 1950s.