The Duplication Group: Difference between revisions
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I just looked at my 1990 copies of Waiting for Santa and Barney Goes To School, and none of them have any kind of printing on the cassette. So I'm starting to think that The Lyons Group was with a different duplicator from 1998-1991. Maybe if we had more proof, we'll know for sure. |
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* Feature Films for Families
* Goldstar Video (1992)
== How to Tell ==
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Revision as of 07:20, 15 November 2023
Cassette Productions was a division of The Duplication Group. Besides duplicating videocassettes, they also replicated CDs and software. In 1998, Cassette Productions was folded into the latter. On December 19 of that year, The Video-Matic Group acquired the company's assets.[1]
Former names
- Cassette Productions (1981-1997)
List of Customers
- The Bridgestone Group
- Brentwood Home Video (some copies of Real Twisters)
- Disneyland (1996)
- Feature Films for Families
- Goldstar Video (1992)
How to Tell
- Some tapes printed at this duplicator have dark print numbers on the left or right side of the cassette (e.g. 167110061).
- On some tapes, the printings would appear in white (e.g. 26785D013).
- Many Goldstar Video tapes, as well as EP mode Feature Films for Families tapes by this duplicator use oversized reels, while some others use regular reels.
- Tapes by this duplicator had some extra black screen following the blank space at the tail end, accompanied by a rumbling sound at the end, in the linear track.
Gallery
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Cassette Productions' logo originally had the byline "A Division of The Duplication Group."
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Around 1992, the byline was dropped.
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An example of what the white printings looked like.
Locations
- Salt Lake City, Utah
Trivia
- Some tapes with its phone number listed were instead duplicated at Central Video or Morning Sun Productions.