Mastering techniques

From Home Video

Even in the old days of home video, special techniques were used for producing masters.

Film chain[edit]

The oldest trick in the book, this was used to produce television prints of motion pictures up until the 1970s. It involved aiming a video camera at a projection screen and capturing the footage projected onto it. Though obviously primitive, it produced decent results for its time, and was just fine for the average home viewer. In addition, some bargain public domain video distributors used this technique.

IVC 9000[edit]

This technique was used to pre-master many DiscoVision titles until 1982. Using a flying spot scanner, MCA transferred films to videotape one frame at a time at what was considered at the time to be high quality, and certainly better-looking than the film chain method. Unfortunately, this technique was well ahead of its time, and IVC went bust in the early '80s, resulting in MCA and Pioneer junking a lot of valuable materials they now considered worthless.

1-inch videotape[edit]

This was used for a lot of mastering in the 1980s. Type C was the preferred format for pre-mastering for laser videodisc, CED, and VHD, though videotape duplicator Deluxe Video Services, and many smaller duplicators, more often used Type B videotape in the mastering process for tapes that were duplicated at their facilities.

Digital videotape[edit]

Beginning in the late '80s, digital videotape became the preferred mastering format for home video, with D2 in particular taking over from Type C videotape as the preferred mastering material for laser videodiscs. Digital Betacam was also a popular format for videocassette duplication.

Professional half-inch tape[edit]

Also rising in popularity among videocassette duplicators in the late '80s was Betacam SP, which saw use well into the DVD era as an alternative to digital formats for those companies that didn't need to worry about having to use higher-quality formats for laser videodisc releases.

Super NTSC[edit]

In the mid '90s, Kuraray started using a technique called Super NTSC, which involved mastering on D1 videotapes before outputting the finished product to D2 sub-masters which were then used to create the laser videodiscs.