Video Tapes

VHS Video Tapes What It Is: The ubiquitous home video has undergone many name changes in the few dozen years they were in popular use: VHS, S-VHS, VHS-C, Video8, Hi8, Digital8, MiniDV. Each stored 30 frames per second analog video on magnetic tape encased in a plastic shell. Our research suggests that there is decades of footage of Disney World trips... each shot from a slightly different perspective.

Why We Don't Convert It: After years of declining video orders and the proliferation of hundreds of competitors (CVS, RiteAid) in this saturated VHS conversion market, we'd retired from all video conversion jobs in August of 2021 to focus on audio only conversions. We sold our existing equipment (or recycled the broken stuff), and we look forward to no longer cleaning the heads on another VCR again!


16" Acetate Dubplates

16 inch wide dubplate What It Is: This one struck us by surprise when it was shipped to us for conversion - this 1940-50's era service was recorded on an enormous 16 inch wide acetate dubplate. This was to prolong the recording time - plenty of room for the single groove, and also recorded at the modern 33rpm speed! Alas, we had to immediately refund and return ship these precious masters, as we could not help with this conversion job! We also updated our vinyl conversion site to reflect this shortcoming.

Why We Don't Convert It: It simply doesn't fit on our turntable! You need a very special player with the tonearm moved at least 9 inches away from the center of the spindle; No modern turntables have this. These were used for radio stations looking to maximize the length of audio programs, while minimizing the man-hours and scheduling required to flip records.


Mini-Cassettes

mini_cassette What It Is: Used to discreetly record meetings or lectures, this cousin of the microcassette made by the same creator of the famed Compact Cassette. The tape casing was slightly wider than the microcassette, and the internal reels used a smaller toothed gear, as the tape is propelled past the tape head by the reels, and not by the tape itself.

Why We Don't Convert It: As a failure of the technology and it's reel-advanced tape, all Mini-Cassettes are prone to wow and flutter. In the end, it lost the format war with Microcassettes, and incoming orders wouldn't cover equipment costs.


8-Track Tapes

8-track What It Is: Groovy 70's era 1/2" magnetic tape format (with a looped reel) that allowed you to instantly skip from one song to another, by the magic of multitrack audio! Found primarily in automobiles and trucks of the era due to the durable nature of the tapes, the occasional home playback decks were rare and often ignored for other components that had better audio reproductions (vinyl and compact cassette).

Why We Don't Convert It: There's no audio on 8-track that isn't already on vinyl or cassette as well. 8-Tracks hold (not surprisingly) a meager 8 tracks, which is often a shortened version of a commercial album release, with tracks removed to match the 8 available. Even at our lowest rates, you could buy the 8 tracks on most major music services for less than the conversion itself.


ADAT / 4-Track Compact Cassette

adat What It Is: Multitrack audio saved onto inexpensive and common analog tape formats. ADAT were rebranded VHS tapes that held 8 tracks, or you could squeeze 4 tracks onto the full width of common Compact Cassettes with the right hardware. It offered studio-caliber analog multitrack recording for discount rates. These devices were popular in the pre-digital age, and were used by thousands of bedroom producers to create fantastic audio works.

Why We Don't Convert It: We can't capture all the audio tracks simultaneously with our current digitizing system. Plus, our destination output formats: CD's and MP3's expect two stereo channels, and we can't mix down the multiple audio channels for you. You'll need professional remixing services, not our consumer-level conversion.


8mm & 16mm Film Formats

filmreels What It Is: Pre-video, your parents would drag out the 8mm/Super 8mm/16mm film camera for short motion picture glimpses of the family holidays - often without audio. Now relegated to a closet, these haven't been played in years due to a broken bulb or non-working projector.

Why We Don't Convert It: Professional film transfer is a complicated process involving thousands of dollars in equipment, and full-time staff to support the aging technology. We recommend (and have used with great success) Debenham Media Group, and their top-of-the-line film scanners for the highest-quality image capture that is far better than you would get with the average telecine transfer!


Now that you've figured what we can't convert, why not take a look at what some of our satisfied customers are saying about their new digital conversions, as written in their own hand! See the nationwide map of our customers (and note how close they are to you!). Our Frequently Asked Questions may satisfy your curiosity, and if not, there's a simple form to ask us anything not covered! We also have a new side-by-side comparison of 'Why We Rock' the competition, and our full pricelist if you're just looking for some cold, hard numbers.