The principle of magnetic recording was invented by a Danish telephone engineer called Valdemar Poulsen in 1899. He used an electromagnet to record the tiny electric currents from a telephone to magnetise a steel wire. This recreated tiny currents in the electromagnet when it was replayed. All tape and video recorders still work this way.
Episode Contents:
Models: A band saw magnetic recorder. Recording a signal on scotch tape covered in rust (FeO^2) particles. A large model of a VCR type head and it's concentrative powers. Illustration of helical scanning.
Machines: Great intro scene by Tim and Rex (e.g. slanting cupboards, man eating garbage disposal, rabid mailman, dogfood eating kid, and the oblivious housewife). Rubber band powered beavers.
Guests: An early Paulson wire tape recorder. A really impressive German "tapedeck" (c.1930) that used razor sharp steel bands running at high speed under high tension. An airplane black box. A 1940's German tape machine the Tonstreiber (sp?). Ampex VTR's at the BBC. A range of major domestic video formats.
Films: The earliest video recordings. A dramatic illustration of generational loss in VHS (re)recordings. Sad adult cartoon characters trying to program their VCR.
Extro: Very odd living room scene with mechanically animated knick knacks, spinning stools, tippy stereo components etc.
Title | The Secret Life of Machines - Season 2 Episode 6 The Secret Life of the Video Recorder |
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Year | 1993 |
Genre | Documentary |
Country | |
Studio | Channel 4 |
Cast | Tim Hunkin, Rex Garrod |
Crew | Tim Hunkin (Writer) |
Alternative Titles | |
Keyword | invention, engineering, educational, machine |
First Air Date | Nov 15, 1988 |
Last Air date | Mar 25, 1993 |
Season | 3 Season |
Episode | 18 Episode |
Runtime | 30:25 minutes |
Quality | HD |
IMDb: | 7.60/ 10 by 5.00 users |
Popularity | 10.935 |
Language | English |