@downstate do you know what brand and/or models you tested? Maybe certain brands or models of vhs players work better? Thanks for the documentation! amazing stuff!
Hi ! Thank you for sharing! I've got some questions : why do you cut the tape at the first time at 7:47? Is there a reason? Because you could just remove the two white reels and put the tape where you wanted.. And another question : so the thing who make the loop tape moving is the aderance to the original tape? Do you have any tricks to make the video loop clean as possible? When you said "after a while the loop seemed to work", did you said than you waited and then it works? Thank you again for sharing, this was a great tutorial!
if i understand the question correctly, the reason i cut it and stuck it together inside the case is to trick the machine to be able to keep the tape playing. If the machine cant turn the reels of tape it will just spit the tape out. The tape isn't being moved by the original tape though. Its being moved by the same mechanism that would be moving the tape if you put a normal vhs inside. Hopefully that makes some sort of sense !
I'm not sure tbh because I have removed the front panel. I think it's an LG one. Someone wrote to me recently saying they had good results with a Sanyo machine but I'm not sure exactly which model.
You can often find VHS players at thrift shops, pawn stores, and yard sales for under $20 and the only truly comparable solution is the Demedash T-120. Which costs $200+... Tbh I'd rather have 10 VHS players 😅
So sick !! Thank you for sharing.
thank you so much, this is exactly what i was looking for, eah, VHS loops
Thanks for watching, gotta love a bit of VHS.
@downstate do you know what brand and/or models you tested? Maybe certain brands or models of vhs players work better? Thanks for the documentation! amazing stuff!
this is genuinely so awesome, i love this
Thanks for sharing. I was looking for a technique I could develop from random thrift gear rather than buying bending devices.
i want to wake up and still see fear and loathing in Las Vegas on my tv but I don’t want to break it by looping lol
beautiful i enjoyed so much all of this
thanks dude ! im working on trying it some more atm, this time with gloves on, i didn't realize how sensitive it was to my oily fingers !
0:08 This is some inception shit right here.
I'm watching this on that same TV. (Toshiba Regza)
Only difference is mine's 42inch. lol
Haha now make a videoloop. A video of you watching this video thats looping on your TV that's showing my TV looping. Or something lol
Good work! Look forward to seeing what grows out of this.
Cheers dude !
Thank you so very much for this
thanks for watching !
Is there a link to specific post wth the tutorial?
Thank you so much for sharing! 🥰
Cheers for watching, glad you found it interesting.
what did u use for putting the image in a cube? whats some gear or just computer processing? this video is beautyful
That was on the VHS tape I used, I didn't make it. It is really cool, I guess they did it with editing software.
Hi ! Thank you for sharing! I've got some questions : why do you cut the tape at the first time at 7:47? Is there a reason? Because you could just remove the two white reels and put the tape where you wanted.. And another question : so the thing who make the loop tape moving is the aderance to the original tape? Do you have any tricks to make the video loop clean as possible? When you said "after a while the loop seemed to work", did you said than you waited and then it works? Thank you again for sharing, this was a great tutorial!
if i understand the question correctly, the reason i cut it and stuck it together inside the case is to trick the machine to be able to keep the tape playing. If the machine cant turn the reels of tape it will just spit the tape out. The tape isn't being moved by the original tape though. Its being moved by the same mechanism that would be moving the tape if you put a normal vhs inside. Hopefully that makes some sort of sense !
@@ThisIsDownstate Thank you very much for the answer! I get it now! Thanks!
which machines was the one that worked?
I'm not sure tbh because I have removed the front panel. I think it's an LG one. Someone wrote to me recently saying they had good results with a Sanyo machine but I'm not sure exactly which model.
Umm
It well damage your VCR
If u try this. But good video
You can often find VHS players at thrift shops, pawn stores, and yard sales for under $20 and the only truly comparable solution is the Demedash T-120. Which costs $200+... Tbh I'd rather have 10 VHS players 😅
Gotta try this
Hell yeah ! Do it man
this is fantastic!
Thanks a lot
3:12 noice
Please no, i already caved on audio cassettes loops. Don't get me into this too man...
The blood on the label really adds to the
- *A* *E* *S* *T* *H* *E* *T* *I* *C* -
to be honest