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That's interesting, I had no idea any were still being manufactured. I suppose the writing is on the wall for any other company making devices that read physical media.
+1. It may become vintage right now.VHS tape is a reliable storage tape, much better than DAT, DCC or open reel.
DAT found some success in the Pro audio market for awhile years ago. DCC was DOA; it sank like a rock right out of the gate. So not sure why those would come up. But curious why you say VHS is a more reliable format than open reel.
VHS is a robust sealed tape, full size opel reel cost was $300!
The cost of open reel and its reliability are 2 different things. And I am not sure what you are saying cost $300? You can buy 10.5" reels today for $40. I have reels that were recorded in the 70s that still sound better than any other audio format.VHS hifi was a very good audio format but the machines were unreliable due to all the moving parts.
Sony made the PCM-501 and several other audio processors for the home audio market which connected to the RCA video input and could turn any $99 VCR into a high quality PCM tape deck. VHS HiFi was FM-based analog but competitive with digital in terms of SQ. I've never been in pro sound field but thought they used formats like UMatic in the early days and DAT later on. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sony_PCM-501ES_digital_audio_processor