videocamera | Retro Active Lifestyle https://retroactivelifestyle.com/tag/videocamera/ Do Less. Live More. Tue, 06 May 2025 06:32:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://i0.wp.com/retroactivelifestyle.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/cropped-Retro-Active-Lifestyle-Icon.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 videocamera | Retro Active Lifestyle https://retroactivelifestyle.com/tag/videocamera/ 32 32 181518531 I Bought A Sony HVR-200 https://retroactivelifestyle.com/i-bought-a-sony-hvr-200/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=i-bought-a-sony-hvr-200 https://retroactivelifestyle.com/i-bought-a-sony-hvr-200/#respond Tue, 06 May 2025 06:31:54 +0000 https://retroactivelifestyle.com/?p=3186 And I couldn't be happier about it.

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I know I said, just yesterday, that I wasn’t going to buy any more old cameras, but 1. The Sony HVR-200 isn’t a camera, and 2. I ordered it a week ago; it just arrived today. If there’s a three, I guess it’s that I fucking love it!

So, What Is A SONY HVR-200 Anyway?

Glad you asked. It’s a very simple mechanism that can either sit on a flat surface or be mounted to a tripod. Two motors allow it to rotate horizontally, 360ΒΊ, and vertically up and down. You can’t go 360ΒΊ vertically, not that you’d want to, but I was disappointed at its limited tilt range.

Sony HVR-200

Both axes are controlled with a remote. The remote lets you adjust the speed for the pan function and set it up to pan automatically. Like I said, it’s a very simple mechanism, but it’s very well built and durable.

I had no idea such a thing existed until that night last week, when I was scrolling through eBay looking for old cameras. In the results for an HVC-2800, I came across this Sony HVR-200. It was listed for $50, but I couldn’t justify spending another $50 after having just purchased two old video cameras, half of which were broken, but I kept my eye on it.

There was another one listed on eBay as well, but they wanted like $250 for it. People think that just because something is old, it’s worth a lot of money. I didn’t even want to pay $50 for one, so I didn’t give the more expensive listing a second glance.

It’s A Rare Find Indeed

I wanted to find out more about the HVR-200, so I did a search and found hardly anything, but I did find a video about it. Just one. This guy was doing some maintenance on one, and he explained that he bought it new back in the 80s when he was a videographer.

He said he bought it because sometimes he would do weddings in a church and not be allowed to stand by the camera, so he bought the HVR-200 so he could sit down and control the pan and tilt. He also had a remote for the camera, so he could start and stop recording and zoom in and out.

Seeing this video and watching how easy it was to fix the loose belts, I was sold. I went straight back to eBay and bought it. I don’t know why this stupid little thing excites me so much, but it does. And I know they have high-tech ones that will pan, tilt, and slide, and you can program them to repeat the same movements over and over, but they’re not $50, and they don’t have that cool, 80s, retro mojo either.

Now, maybe if I can stop buying old cameras and accessories for a minute, I can actually use them to make some videos. πŸ€ͺ

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Fuck…πŸ€¦β€β™‚οΈ https://retroactivelifestyle.com/fuck-%f0%9f%a4%a6%e2%99%82%ef%b8%8f/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=fuck-%25f0%259f%25a4%25a6%25e2%2599%2582%25ef%25b8%258f https://retroactivelifestyle.com/fuck-%f0%9f%a4%a6%e2%99%82%ef%b8%8f/#respond Mon, 05 May 2025 06:10:35 +0000 https://retroactivelifestyle.com/?p=3179 I've hit bottom.

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This is it. I’m not buying anymore old cameras. I saw an ad on Craigslist a week ago, and I was thinking about calling, but I wasn’t sure about it. The ad had a picture in it that showed four cameras, some lenses, microphones, and cables. Oh, so many cables.

So, this weekend, I broke down and sent an email, and long story short, I ended up with two broken cameras, three quite nice lenses, a microphone, two 8mm cassette tapes, and everything else you see in the picture. It’s a lot of cool old stuff, but I overpaid, and I’m kicking myself for it.

I made myself feel a tiny bit better, though. I saw another ad for a cue stick rack that someone was giving away, so I raced to the other end of town and snatched it up. It’s really nice and almost makes up for my previous blunder. Actually, financially speaking, it more than makes up for it. Now, I just have to finish my garage remodel so I can find someplace to put it.

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It’s Here! https://retroactivelifestyle.com/its-here/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=its-here https://retroactivelifestyle.com/its-here/#respond Tue, 29 Apr 2025 05:32:59 +0000 https://retroactivelifestyle.com/?p=3053 It wasn't supposed to be here until Wednesday, but it's here!

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My Canon EOS R50V arrived! It’s way more complicated than an iPhone. I don’t know what any of the little pictograms on the main dial mean, I don’t know how to set it up, and I can’t find a manual for it, so I guess I’ll have to try each setting and combination of settings until I figure it all out.

It’s going to be really nice having a stand-alone camera that isn’t also my phone.

I’ll have more to say about it once I’ve had a chance to play with it, but so far, I’m pleased.

This is the first picture I took with it.

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Ain’t Nothing Like A Friday Morning Junk Sale https://retroactivelifestyle.com/aint-nothing-like-a-friday-morning-junk-sale/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=aint-nothing-like-a-friday-morning-junk-sale https://retroactivelifestyle.com/aint-nothing-like-a-friday-morning-junk-sale/#respond Sat, 01 Mar 2025 05:50:41 +0000 https://retroactivelifestyle.com/?p=2611 I did alright.

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I was in the mood for a garage sale this morning, so I checked the ads on Craigslist and found a warehouse sale at the west end of town. Normally, I try to avoid warehouse sales because they’re always store returns, and I’m not interested in that type of shit. I like old shit. I decided to take a chance on this one, though, because back in September, they were giving away a shitload of milk crates and other plastic totes, which led me to believe that they don’t trade in Amazon pallets.

The other reason I decided to check it out was because Friday sales are always the best. If you’ve got so much shit to sell that you don’t think one day will be enough time to sell it, and you choose a standard working day as one of your sale days, you’re probably going to make deals that benefit the buyer more than yourself.

So, I rode down there to see what it was about. All I took with me was a shopping bag because I wasn’t expecting to find anything of interest. When I saw the sale, I was certain I wouldn’t find anything if for no other reason than everything was in boxes and required a lot of digging. I hate that.

I’m not sure what their deal is, but everything they were selling looked like was estate sale leftovers. I suppose it could be storage auctions, too. The point is, the stuff wasn’t retail returns, it was old. The woman taking money said that tomorrow they would have new stuff, so I guess they have a continuous source of inventory.

When I arrived, there was an 18-wheeler attempting to back up to the loading dock, which was at an angle to the driveway. On any other day it might not have been any problem, but today the tables for the sale, and all of the customers were in the way. It took ages for him to back up. I heard a man say, “It’s time to go back to trucking school.” What a dick, I thought. Old men in this city are like that: Simultaneously, and equally ignorant and arrogant.

As I said before, I hate digging through boxes. If I see nothing but boxes at a garage sale, I won’t even stop. I did a lap through all of the aisles just to get a sense of the offerings, but nothing jumped out at me. Of course, my attention was split between the stuff in the boxes and the truck trying to squeeze by the tables with inches to spare. Once he finally made it to the loading dock, I was able to focus and that’s when I found some cassette tapes. I’ve been looking for some time, with no success, for jazz tapes. I didn’t find any today, but I did find some big band music, so I’m getting close.

The tapes and video camera I bought

Once I found those, I went back through to take a closer look through some of the boxes. I found some interesting things, but not interesting enough to buy. There were some old film slides, and 16mm film. There was also a box of porn on VHS. What I did find that was interesting enough to buy, though, was a 12′ stand for my green screen, and a VHS-C video camera that came in a nice bag and included an unopened VHS-C cassette tape and a used one. I hoped the used one might have home videos on it. It was a woman demonstrating a belly dance. The video camera doesn’t work, so that’s a bummer. Still, it was a good sale, and I might take Bonnie back tomorrow.

My green screen stand

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Fuck πŸ˜– 😩 πŸ€¦β€β™‚οΈ https://retroactivelifestyle.com/fuck-%f0%9f%98%96-%f0%9f%98%a9-%f0%9f%a4%a6%e2%99%82%ef%b8%8f/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=fuck-%25f0%259f%2598%2596-%25f0%259f%2598%25a9-%25f0%259f%25a4%25a6%25e2%2599%2582%25ef%25b8%258f https://retroactivelifestyle.com/fuck-%f0%9f%98%96-%f0%9f%98%a9-%f0%9f%a4%a6%e2%99%82%ef%b8%8f/#respond Thu, 30 Jan 2025 07:53:17 +0000 https://retroactivelifestyle.com/?p=2280 I broke my Insta360 One X...again.

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That’s the text message I sent to Bonnie, with a picture of yet another shattered Insta360 One X. Unlike the previous four or five times I’ve dropped one of my Insta360 One X’s, though, there will be no resurrection for this one. It’s totally fucked.

The shatter lens of My Insta360 One X
It hit so hard, it busted the case open

It Was A Day Like Any Other

I was working in the garage today, as is my life now, and I wanted to get a shot of the workbench while I was working, but I didn’t want the Insta360 One X to be in my other camera’s frame. So, I laid it, attached to a selfie stick, on top of my open garage door. As I placed it there, I thought to myself, you’re going to forget it’s there when you shut the door. And I did.

I pushed the button, and the garage door tossed the Insta360 One X onto my driveway. It was such a stupid and preventable mistake, too. I shouldn’t have put it on top of the garage door. I’ve done this a million times before with all sorts of different objects. What makes this incident even stupider is that there was no reason for the camera to be up there when I shut the door anyway. The SD card filled up a while ago. Since I was going inside as soon as I was done painting the shelf, I figured I would take the camera in then. I should have taken it down when I noticed it was no longer recording.

Now it’s toast. It’s destruction was epic. I just wish one of the four cameras in the vicinity had caught it. The garage camera caught some of it.

So, I guess this is the perfect excuse to buy a new Insta360. Too bad I can’t afford one right now.

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Zenith VC-1800: Will I Ever Find My Elusive Unicorn? https://retroactivelifestyle.com/zenith-vc-1800/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=zenith-vc-1800 https://retroactivelifestyle.com/zenith-vc-1800/#respond Tue, 07 Jan 2025 07:59:00 +0000 https://retroactivelifestyle.com/?p=2055 I finally found the video camera I've been searching for for the past two years, but was not to be!

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I Finally Found A Zenith VC-1800!

After two years of searching and waiting, I finally found a Zenith VC-1800 that wasn’t overtly knackered. It was covertly knackered. There was no way to know until it arrived, and I was able to test it out. Unlike the Sony HVC-2800 I paid $10 for last year, which didn’t work at all, the Zenith VC-1800 I just bought mostly works. It makes a picture; it just looks like shit. The picture is green and over-exposed. I was deflated but not in shock. The camera is 40 years old, after all.

The Zenith VC-1800 that I just bought
My new, broken Zenith VC-1800

Still, it’s disappointing because I have videos I want to make with it. Sure, I could use the Sony HVC-2400 that I bought in 2023, but it doesn’t have autofocus, which is a necessity for what I want to do. So, I just have to keep looking, I guess.

But Why A Zenith VC-1800?

My dad bought a Zenith VC-1600 in 1981, but it was stolen when our house was burgled two years later. He replaced it with a Zenith VC-1800, which he dragged out for every birthday, BBQ, Christmas, vacation, and event for the next five years.

My dad with the Zenith VC-1600 in Florida at Christmas in 1982
Dad with the VC-1600

It was not as mobile as cameras would eventually become. The camera itself was useless without a video tape recorder. You plugged the Zenith VC-1800 into the Zenith VRT-9500 video tape recorder. Then, you put a Betamax video cassette tape in the tape recorder. The VTR was battery-powered, so you could take it anywhere. It had a carrying case that you could slip over your left shoulder while you held the camera on your right shoulder. It was high-tech back in 1981.

One Camera Dies, So Another Can Be Born

On Christmas 1988, the camera stopped recording sound, and my dad never used it again. Coincidentally, that same Christmas, I got the best Christmas present I had ever received: A PXL 2000 Camcorder. I never wanted anything as badly as I wanted that little camera. I took it with me everywhere. Sure, the image sucked, and all the mic picked up was the sound of the motor, but it was a video camera that I was allowed to use. Plus, it came with a badass little black-and-white TV.

Me recording my dad with my PXL 2000 on Christmas 1988
That’s me on the right with my PXL 2000

By the following summer, the new camera smell had worn off. Batteries were hella expensive, and it went through eight of them with each ten-minute recording. I also lost the tape it came with, and though I didn’t understand it at the time, it only worked with high-bias chromium dioxide C-90 tapes. I could never get it to work with any of my ordinary blank tapes. The camera still worked when plugged into a TV, though, so I mainly used it as a security camera and to prank my friends.

My dad with the PXL 2000 TV
The PXL 2000 TV

Back In The Summer of ’89 🎢

In the summer of 1989, my two friends and I wanted to make movies, but my PXL 2000 wasn’t cutting it. Neither of them had access to a camera, so we asked my mom if we could play with my dad’s old Zenith VC-1800, and to my great surprise, she said yes. She warned us that the sound no longer worked, which was a bummer, but we weren’t planning on making dialogue-heavy movies. We grew up on The A-Team and CHIPS. Our movies were going to be all action and stunts.

After our first day of shooting, we hooked the VTR up to the TV in my clubhouse to watch the dailies. We didn’t notice at first, but then I suddenly realized that it had recorded the audio perfectly. We had a fully functioning video camera! Until I knocked the tripod over. The microphone snapped off when it hit the ground.

My clubhouse
My clubhouse.

We spent that whole summer making movies in my backyard. When it was time to return to school, we decided it would be best to erase the tapes. I think it was mostly my friends who wanted to do that. They were embarrassed for whatever reason. I wish I still had them. The tapes, not the friends. They sucked. When school started again, we drifted apart. We were all in different grades, and they were into sports. We never made movies again, and we never really hung out again after that summer.

It Wasn’t Just A Summer Fling

That was just the beginning of my interest in making videos, though. I set up the VC-1800 on a tripod in my room, and I practiced making special effects. I learned how to make titles on the camera, and I even got a computer program called VCR Companion for making graphics for videos.

In junior high, I would try to get friends to make videos with me, but no one was interested. The closest I got was my friend John, who only wanted to record the covers of magazines. I didn’t understand his vision, so I dropped it.

My mom signed me up for a film club at the teen center. They were going to make a movie. I was super excited to be a part of it until I showed up the first day and saw how disorganized they were. No one took the movie seriously, and they didn’t even try to make anything look real. They phoned the whole thing in. When it aired on public access, I watched in disbelief at how bad it was. I was so glad I bailed.

Videography equipment was expensive in the 90s, and because I didn’t know anyone interested in it, video fell by the wayside. I sold the Zenith VC-1800 and the PX 2000 at a garage sale around the time I met Bonnie. I also sold my NES at that sale. If I had a time machine, the first place I would go is back to 1999 to kick myself in the balls and take back my shit.

A New Era of Home Video

It wasn’t until Bonnie and I were expecting our first son that I picked up a video camera again. We bought a Sony Hi-8 about a month before he was born. I recorded everything with that camera until digital started taking over the video landscape. Around 2009/10, when YouTube started to take off, my dad randomly sent me a video camera. He said I could borrow it but never asked for it back. I started making YouTube videos with it. I was too busy and financially strapped to make videos for fun, but I found I could justify making videos if they were for my business.

Me with my Sony Handicam pressed up to my eye in a funny hat on the Disneyland Railway

The Start of My Cleaning Channel

The first video I made was to demonstrate how carpet protector works. I had a kit to demonstrate carpet protector in the customer’s kitchen, but it was messy and time-consuming, and nobody wanted to see it. I thought if I could play it for the customer on my iPad, it might be more effective, and man, was I right. Carpet protector sales exploded.

My next video was meant to answer the most frequently asked question I would get: How do you clean carpet? I showed up to a job one day to clean a very dirty white carpet and limestone flooring. The customer told me what she wanted done, and then she left, and she wasn’t going to return until I was gone. I had the camera and tripod in the van, so I took full advantage of the situation. I set up and recorded every step of my carpet cleaning process. From then on, when customers would ask how I clean carpet, I would open my iPad and show them. I put the video on my website and on YouTube. My goal was to have the job sold before the customer called, and very often, it was.

From Business to Pleasure to Business

Before long, I was making videos just for fun as well as business videos. Then, in 2020, the world changed, and I started making videos full-time. In the autumn of 2020, my mom showed up at my house with all of the family pictures, films, slides, and a box full of Betamax tapes from my dad’s Zenith VC-1800. I found a Sony SL-2000 and TT-2000 to convert the tapes with, and one by one, I digitized them all.

My Therapist Is A Zenith VC-1800

Watching all of those home movies was a wild, emotional ride. I had never seen any of the footage before. Seeing and hearing myself as a little child is the closest thing to a time machine I will ever experience. Watching those tapes did more for me than a lifetime in therapy. Seeing how my family interacted back then answered a lot of questions about my early life.

An Archival Goldmine

Every time my dad hit record, he said the day, month, year, and what was going on in the video. That made it so easy to organize all of the footage. Plus, I was able to organize the still photographs that were taken at the same time but weren’t labeled at all.

You Can Never Go Back

The nostalgia of seeing all of those old home movies made me want an old Betamax video camera. I couldn’t remember which one we had, so I bought a Sony HVC-2400. It was cool, but it wasn’t right. Then, I bought an HVC 2800. It didn’t work. Eventually, I figured out that it was the Zenith VC-1800 that we had, so I started searching for one. They are hard to find, and when one does turn up, it’s knackered. The one I just bought was the only one I’ve found so far that was complete, not obviously damaged, and offered at a fair price. Some of these eBay sellers think they have solid gold on their hands.

Will I Ever Find A Zenith VC-1800?

I bought Panasonic’s version of the VC-1800 a few months ago. It looks just like the VC-1800, but it’s made for VHS, not Betamax. Maybe I can scavenge it for parts. πŸ€·β€β™‚οΈ I’ll keep looking, and maybe one day in the not-too-distant future, I’ll find a working Zenith VC-1800. Then, I can start searching for a PXL 2000 and an NES and be ten years old again.

My current collection of Betamax, VHS, and Hi-8 video cameras
My camera collection.

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