#1
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Who made VCRs for Zenith in the 1980s?
I've happened across a few 1980s Zenith VCRs from the early front-loader era and I've always been impressed by their very sturdy build quality. I know they're made in Japan, as all American brand VCRs were until Thomson took over RCA and GE, but who made VCRs for Zenith during the 1980s?
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#2
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Zenith Betas were Sony, VHS was JVC though they may have switched as time went on.
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Tom C. Zenith: The quality stays in EVEN after the name falls off! What I want. --> http://www.videokarma.org/showpost.p...62&postcount=4 |
#3
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The one I bought today is a JVC according to the circuit boards inside. Solid as a rock and unlike my Panasonic and a RCA I used to have, it actually works! If I'm reading the date code on the power transformer correctly it's from 1986.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D5LkJPuW...name=4096x4096 https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D5LyggFW...name=4096x4096 |
#4
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Zenith started out using Sony built Beta machines. During the format wars
they even gave us "beta is better" buttons to wear on the sales floor. Then they switched to VHS & JVC was the supplier. Sales skyrocketed & the JVC's were as good as you could get. IIRC that was about mid 80's. Latter they switched to Gold Star VCR's. Things were not as good. Combos were sourced from other low end suppliers. Probably the best was the Zenith / JVC VR4000. A HiFi rig that had great special effects. I remember frame by framing movies to see special effects. One I remember was a RPG being shot at a door. You could see the wire the fake round ran down. Really pissah stuff back then. 73 Zeno LFOD ! |
#5
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Mine is a model VRD200 apparently and while it's not the fanciest VCR, I appreciate its solid feel, soft-touch controls, and of course the fact that it works flawlessly.
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Audiokarma |
#6
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Quote:
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