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Early 80s TOS VHS Tapes

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It is a matter of scale and perception. When you look at a small box you can wonder and balk over its price. And, yes, I still sometimes see Blu-Ray as being "not worth it" yet in some cases.

It comes down to how you look at it. I've had an iPod Nano for three years. And while I don't have quite my entire music library on it it's damned close and the iPod is only a bit more over half capacity filled. When you think about the cost of an iPod you can wonder, but then I don't have to decide which tape or CD to bring with me or have to lug around a bulky player for them. I have close to my entire music library in my pocket and at my immediate disposal. That simply wasn't possible before.
 
HMV is practically a High Street monopoly in the UK, they're dying on their arse because they don't know that appendage from their elbow. They're charging £250 in store for an item with an R.R.P of £200. On their website it's £159, and looking at all the other UK e-tailers I could pick it up for £138. Considering it's a new release here, and £138 is actually cheaper than buying all three seasons individually, that is really fine value!

Of course my inner stinge has just reminded me that I waited for the Laurel & Hardy DVD boxset, released with an R.R.P of £200, but which I picked up 2 years later for £30.
 
I still have 'The Cage' that has the black and white workprint footage inserted (1986?) and Roddenberry's intro comments. I also have the promotional poster for it, very nice artwork.
 
I still have 'The Cage' that has the black and white workprint footage inserted (1986?) and Roddenberry's intro comments. I also have the promotional poster for it, very nice artwork.
I also have that VHS version of The Cage, along with a few other mid-80s video tapes (The Menagerie and Trouble with Tribbles).
 
Pioneer was the last holdout for LD and they stopped making players a few years ago. I bought one of the last batch and it cost me $1000. But I didn't mind, I had the cash at the time, and I was just finishing up getting the series on LaserDisc.

Robert April, just check eBay. They're always up for sale and not for all that much. The Pioneer DVL-919 also plays DVDs and CDs. It's the last one Pioneer put out.

I've got a regular search going on eBay, which I've just updated. :D

Certainly explains the mountain of Pioneer units that keep showing up...
 
I had the complete VHS Columbia House TOS and TNG: that cost a fortune. I sold them at a garage sale for something like $30 about 3 years ago. I'd already replaced them with DVDs.
 
I gave my TNG and DS9 collections (less a couple of TOS-related episodes) to the local library. They were checked out rather often, but eventually sold to raise funds for additional materials for the library. Got a nice letter from the library about it.
 
Pioneer was the last holdout for LD and they stopped making players a few years ago. I bought one of the last batch and it cost me $1000. But I didn't mind, I had the cash at the time, and I was just finishing up getting the series on LaserDisc.

Robert April, just check eBay. They're always up for sale and not for all that much. The Pioneer DVL-919 also plays DVDs and CDs. It's the last one Pioneer put out.

They're completely worthless.

To you, possibly. Not to others, not to me. I collect the various video versions of Trek. I would have loved to have found these.


You could sell TOS VHS tapes in a yard sale for $.50...if you are lucky. Why anyone would want to play horrible quality tapes that are not even NEW is beyond me.

RAMA
 
Pioneer was the last holdout for LD and they stopped making players a few years ago. I bought one of the last batch and it cost me $1000. But I didn't mind, I had the cash at the time, and I was just finishing up getting the series on LaserDisc.

Robert April, just check eBay. They're always up for sale and not for all that much. The Pioneer DVL-919 also plays DVDs and CDs. It's the last one Pioneer put out.

They're completely worthless.

To you, possibly. Not to others, not to me. I collect the various video versions of Trek. I would have loved to have found these.


You could sell TOS VHS tapes in a yard sale for $.50...if you are lucky. Why anyone would want to play horrible quality tapes that are not even NEW is beyond me.

RAMA

You kill me. :guffaw:
 
I have TOS on video, all in pristine condition. For years that was all the TOS I had as the DVD sets were 180.00 a season here (!!) and I collected all the other series first. Now I love having them because they aren't remastered and I will never get rid of them. I gave all my other Trek videos away but not the TOS ones, they were the first Trek I owned.

Mine have 3 eps on each video.
 
One thing I really like about the various VHS releases is that they were numbered in Production order. It's baffling that all of a sudden TPTB decided to go with air dates, which feel so wrong to me. I hate having to switch out the discs constantly to watch in production order.

I was way too young to have the money to collect the VHS releases back in those days. I did rent them every now and then from a local video shop (the owner was a massive fan, so there was actually a designated Star Trek section which was decorated with Models and standees. Although I doubt I'd pick up any of those tapes and watch them today, I imagine they look really impressive lined up on a shelf. We recently had a thread on this, but I do miss the more physical quality of VHS.
 
What I don't get is this DVD collection which I believe only had one or two episodes per disc. Sounds like they were trying to rip-off the fans big-time. How many episodes per VHS tape?

5101ib4_27.jpeg
 
What I don't get is this DVD collection which I believe only had one or two episodes per disc. Sounds like they were trying to rip-off the fans big-time. How many episodes per VHS tape?

5101ib4_27.jpeg

I don't believe codec compression worked as well in the early 2000's when these were released. Even these looked a ton better than their VHS counterparts.

Plus they're in production order. :eek:
 
What I don't get is this DVD collection which I believe only had one or two episodes per disc. Sounds like they were trying to rip-off the fans big-time. How many episodes per VHS tape?

5101ib4_27.jpeg

I don't believe codec compression worked as well in the early 2000's when these were released. Even these looked a ton better than their VHS counterparts.

Plus they're in production order. :eek:

Very true about codec compression! I keep forgetting how much has changed in such little time!
 
Pioneer was the last holdout for LD and they stopped making players a few years ago. I bought one of the last batch and it cost me $1000. But I didn't mind, I had the cash at the time, and I was just finishing up getting the series on LaserDisc.

Robert April, just check eBay. They're always up for sale and not for all that much. The Pioneer DVL-919 also plays DVDs and CDs. It's the last one Pioneer put out.



To you, possibly. Not to others, not to me. I collect the various video versions of Trek. I would have loved to have found these.


You could sell TOS VHS tapes in a yard sale for $.50...if you are lucky. Why anyone would want to play horrible quality tapes that are not even NEW is beyond me.

RAMA

You kill me. :guffaw:
Why? Just stating a fact...there is almost no demand at all for analog video tapes of just about any movie or series..even if kept in pristine condition, they deteriorate with every viewing.

RAMA
 
You could sell TOS VHS tapes in a yard sale for $.50...if you are lucky. Why anyone would want to play horrible quality tapes that are not even NEW is beyond me.

RAMA

I had a big collection of Disney movies, probably 25 or 30, on VHS from when my kids were little. They were between 15 and 20 years old. They sold for $3.00 apiece on a rummage sale...people snatched them up so quickly I couldn't believe it.

The difference is, moms or babysitters are going to pop these Disney tapes in to keep Junior entertained for a few minutes. They're not collectible by any means, but they're cheap entertainment for kids.

If I had the entire TOS collection on VHS, I'd be inclined to hold on to them. I'm not sure why.

On the other hand, I do have the entire ScFi Channel "Special Edition" series recorded on VHS, but only for the interviews. Now those are available online too.
 
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