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- From: MDuPree@world.std.com (Micky DuPree)
- Subject: Sharp VC-WD1; PAL<-->NTSC conversion WITH tuner & timer
- Message-ID: <C008nx.BGH@world.std.com>
- Followup-To: rec.video
- Summary: Unless you're from France or Brazil, it's great.
- Keywords: PAL, NTSC, standards converter
- Organization: The World Public Access UNIX, Brookline, MA
- Date: Tue, 29 Dec 1992 05:02:20 GMT
- Lines: 206
-
- There's been a lot of talk in rec.video and rec.arts.tv.uk about video
- recorders that will convert PAL to NTSC and vice versa. The Panasonic
- AG-W1, which will convert any standard to any other standard, has been
- around for a while, and while the quality is good, it's really designed
- more for the low-end commercial customer rather than the high-end home
- enthusiast, as the AG-W1 lacks both a timer and an RF (broadcast or
- cable) tuner. Recently Aiwa has come out with some units that will
- convert, and others have reported on their advantages and disadvantages.
- (The chief tradeoff that I can discern from these reports is that the
- conversion quality is noticeably lower than that of the Panasonic unit,
- but the price is substantially lower as well.) A few months ago in
- rec.video, Wolfgang R. Schultz reported purchasing a new Sharp unit that
- combined the conversion process of the Panasonic with many of the home
- VCR features of the Aiwa. Wolfgang purchased his through a contact in
- Singapore, but Robert Kobenter posted with the address and phone number
- of a dealer who would supply them in the U.S.A. I have purchased one of
- these units and my review of it follows. It's slanted towards American
- readers in terms of setup and availability, but the specs and technical
- information should be useful to all interested parties. I'll be
- transporting my unit to England in a matter of days so I may post a
- follow-up about its performance over there.
-
- Record, Playback, and Conversion
-
- The Sharp VC-WD1 (which dealers sometimes shorten to just "Sharp WD1")
- apparently does what the advance press on it claimed. The manual that
- comes with it says that it will record in, play back in, and digitally
- convert to NTSC, PAL, and MESECAM. I can confirm from my own experience
- that it records, plays back, and digitally converts to and from NTSC and
- PAL. Not having any original source material in MESECAM, I have to take
- it on faith that it does the same for MESECAM. (The MESECAM indicator
- lights do light up when I press the appropriate buttons.) Wolfgang
- reports that French SECAM tapes played in it will output only in
- black and white. The conversion output seems about equivalent to what
- I'm used to seeing from the Panasonic AG-W1. The AG-W1 output may be a
- little sharper, but my ability to judge that is hampered by the fact
- that I currently do not have a multistandard TV set, and so must view
- NTSC-->PAL conversions TWICE converted (converted once again to output
- to my NTSC TV set). In my experience, conversion reduces resolution,
- but not as much as an ordinary dub. The Sharp apparently performs the
- superior, "interpolating" method of converting the number of scan lines
- (averages the lines, so to speak), as I have not seen any of the
- problems with diagonal lines that have been reported as artifacts of the
- new Aiwa converters' output (which merely drops lines or doubles lines
- to get PAL and MESECAM to match up with NTSC and vice versa).
-
- The short version: I don't think it'll get good results with French or
- Brazilian tapes. With a few other exceptions, though (the manual warns
- of possible problems with Tahiti and the Ivory Coast), it should have
- very wide compatibility.
-
- The WD1 actually has two video outputs. Output 1 is always a direct
- pass line (no conversion). Output 2 is the conversion output if
- conversion is selected, but if conversion has not been selected, then it
- outputs another unconverted signal, in addition to Output 1. You should
- be able to make both a converted dub and an unconverted dub of the same
- tape at the same time.
-
- It comes equipped with 19-micron heads for improved NTSC EP performance
- and 24-micron heads for optimum PAL/MESECAM LP performance.
-
- It will directly convert a broadcast signal from the tuner in one format
- into the other formats that it supports. E.g., with my own two hands, I
- have set the timer and recorded off-air in PAL in the United States.
- Robert reports having received a tape from Wolfgang that was recorded
- off-air in NTSC in Germany.
-
- Tuning
-
- The WD1 manual says that it is supposed to have the ability to tune
- broadcast signals in NTSC, PAL (B/G, I, D/K), SECAM (B/G, D/K, K1), and
- MESECAM (B/G, D/K, K1). I've only been able to test it on North
- American broadcast and cable signals so far, but Wolfgang reports no
- problems tuning in Germany. It does tune the full range of North
- American VHF and UHF broadcast signals and will tune VHF cable signals
- up to about channel 36 or 37. I can pull in a fair signal on cable
- channel 37, but I have a feeling it wasn't designed to go that high.
- (It seems to be pretty good at stabilizing weak signals.) The tuner
- frequency ranges are VHF 43MHz-300MHz and UHF 470MHz-892MHz. It has 39
- channel presets. It will not tune broadcast signals in France, which is
- SECAM-L, or in Brazil, which is PAL-M.
-
- Other Features
-
- Record in PAL/MESECAM SP/LP and NTSC SP/EP. NTSC LP playback only.
- 8-event/1-year timer. (Americans should note that the clock and timer
- specify the date by giving the day first and then the month.)
- Simplified one-button one-event 24-hour timed recording.
- Real-time counter.
- Hi-Fi sound (It also says "Stereo," but says that the unit will only
- perform off-air stereo recording for the multiplexing system in use
- in Japan.)
- Remote control with free speed shuttle.
- Digital picture-in-picture, even for two inputs in different standards.
- Digital picture freeze for both playback and tuner.
- Nine-frame multi-strobe (for the f/x obsessed).
- Noiseless digital search/digital slow/digital still.
- Random segment repeat.
- Automatic video head cleaning.
- Digital index search system for program starts.
- Child-proof lockout of most functions.
-
- Other Specifications
-
- Power requirements: AC 110-240v, 50/60Hz, automatic adapting.
- 20-minute power outage backup.
- Power consumption: Approx. 30W.
- Dimensions: 430mm(W) x 348mm(D) x 89mm(H).
- Manual printed in English, Japanese, Chinese, and a script I'm not
- familiar with (I think the number 5 looks like this: o ) that starts
- from the "back" of the manual.
-
- Plugs and Connectors
-
- The power cord terminates in what looks to me like an ordinary North
- American style plug with two flat parallel prongs (| |), and I've been
- plugging it into my American wall outlet with no problems. The unit
- comes with a plug adaptor that has two tubular prongs (o o).
-
- The A/V inputs and outputs are ordinary female RCA connectors.
-
- The RF input is, I believe, a female European-style RF connector. I had
- to go to Radio Shack and get a male-European-to-female-North-American-F-
- connector adaptor to be able to plug my North American male F-connector
- wall cable into it. The RF output is a male European RF connector, and
- interestingly enough, Radio Shack doesn't seem to sell anything that
- terminates in a female European connector. I'm getting the output off
- the A/V lines at the moment. The unit comes with an RF cable that has a
- male European connector on one end and a female European connector on
- the other. I've been told that you could cut this up and attach your
- own F connector to the other end of the female European half, but I
- haven't wanted to do this to my cable as I expect to be using it in
- London soon.
-
- Comparisons with the Panasonic AG-W1
-
- I've worked with a friend's AG-W1. I found it to be more user-friendly
- than the WD1 and unlike the WD1, the AG-W1 plays, records, and converts
- France's SECAM-L and Brazil's PAL-M system. It also plays back S-VHS
- (with VHS resolution), which the WD1 will not do. An important
- advantage of the AG-W1 is that it's not U.S. grey market like the WD1,
- so it actually comes with a warranty in the U.S. But the AG-W1's two
- main drawbacks to me were 1) the lack of a tuner and 2) the lack of a
- timer. In the U.S. and possibly Canada as well, a clever person could
- get around these problems by using an NTSC VCR to act as a tuner and a
- VCR Plus automatic programmer to "trick" the AG-W1 into doing virtual
- timer recording. Outside North America it's a bit trickier, as you
- would have to break the VCR Plus codes in order to be able to use it.
- George Fergus also reports that some of the programmable "universal
- remotes" (such as the Radio Shack/Memorex 8-in-1) have their own timer.
- Thus you can program it to turn on a regular NTSC VCR and then turn on
- the AG-W1 and record. Of course it's a bit involved, but it is possible
- to do (assuming that timer-equipped universal remotes are still
- available).
-
- The basic criteria for my purchase were that I wanted a full-function
- VCR for both the U.S. (where I expect to be spending most of my life)
- and the U.K. (where I expect to be spending most of next year), plus the
- ability to perform interpolating conversion. I am enormously pleased
- with the WD1, as so far it accomplishes almost everything that I could
- ask of it (the only notable exception being the ability to tune U.S. VHF
- cable channels higher than 37).
-
- I've heard that Sharp also makes a stand-alone converter unit, the
- AN-200SC, which costs around $500 US in Singapore (sans tuner and timer
- like the AG-W1), which would make it very competitively priced with the
- AG-W1.
-
- Price and Ordering
-
- I purchased my Sharp VC-WD1 from:
-
- Gandhi Electronics
- 2358 W. Devon Ave.
- Chicago, IL 60659
- USA
- Phone (312) 973-4227
- Fax: (312) 973-1589
- Toll free (in the U.S.): (800) 235-7860
-
- (As reported by Robert Kobenter, passing on information from Dinesh
- Punjabi.) I paid US $1550 for it plus $10 UPS shipping from Illinois to
- Massachusetts. It is much more expensive than the Aiwa converter prices
- people have been quoting in rec.video (less than $1000), but slightly
- lower than the mail order prices I've been quoted for the AG-W1
- ($1600-$1700). Wolfgang purchased his WD1 via a contact in Singapore
- for approx. US $1070 (not including shipping and customs duty to bring
- it into Germany), and I gather that it had a list price in Singapore of
- US $1200. My unit arrived with the wholesaler's return address on the
- carton:
-
- SMR Electronics, Inc.
- 50 Canal Street
- New York, NY 10002
- USA
- (212) 219-0488
-
- According to Srivatsan Sukumar, SMR will not sell to private
- individuals, but if you have a friend who's a dealer, maybe you can get
- a better deal by calling SMR direct.
-
- Thanks to all previous posters and private contacts on the subject for
- helping me with information and reviews.
-
- -Micky
-
-