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Betacam

Betacam is a family of half-inch professional videocassette products developed by Sony in 1982. In colloquial use, Betacam singly is often used to refer to a Betacam camcorder, a Betacam tape, a Betacam video recorder or the format itself.

This article is about the professional Betacam format. It is not to be confused with the related but incompatible Betamax format, nor the consumer-oriented Betamovie camcorder line.

Media type

August 7, 1982
Lifespan: August 1982-March 2016
Technical Support 1982-2023[1][2]

All Betacam variants from (plain) analog recording Betacam to Betacam SP and digital recording Digital Betacam (and additionally, HDCAM and HDCAM SR), use the same shape videocassettes, meaning vaults and other storage facilities do not have to be changed when upgrading to a new format. The cassettes are available in two sizes: S (short or small) and L (long or large). The Betacam camcorder can only load S magnetic tapes, while television studio sized video tape recorders (VTR) designed for video editing can play both S and L tapes.


The cassette shell and case for each Betacam cassette is colored differently depending on the format, allowing for easy visual identification. There is also a mechanical key that allows a video tape recorder to identify which format has been inserted.


The format supplanted the three-quarter-inch U-Matic format, which Sony had introduced in 1971. In addition to improvements in video quality, the Betacam configuration of an integrated professional video camera/recorder led to its rapid adoption by electronic news gathering (ENG) organizations.


DigiBeta, the common name for Digital Betacam, went on to become the single most successful professional broadcast digital recording video tape format in history, but now although Betacam remains popular in the field and for archiving, new tapeless digital products have led to a phasing out of Betacam products in television studio environments since 2006.

A Betacam SP KMJ camcorder

A Betacam SP KMJ camcorder

The left side of a Sony BVW-D600P camcorder

The left side of a Sony BVW-D600P camcorder

The right side of a Sony BVW-D600P camcorder

The right side of a Sony BVW-D600P camcorder

A Sony BVV-5 docked to a JVC KY-D29 camera head

A Sony BVV-5 docked to a JVC KY-D29 camera head

A Sony UVW-100B in the newsroom of KTAB-TV/KRBC-TV, a Nexstar Media Group duopoly

A Sony UVW-100B in the newsroom of KTAB-TV/KRBC-TV, a Nexstar Media Group duopoly

A size comparison between Betacam SP L (top), Betacam SP S (bottom-left), and VHS (bottom-right)

A size comparison between Betacam SP L (top), Betacam SP S (bottom-left), and VHS (bottom-right)

The Sony BVW-75 editing VTR

The Sony BVW-75 editing VTR

The Sony PVW-2800 editing VTR

The Sony PVW-2800 editing VTR

The Sony UVW-1800 editing VTR

The Sony UVW-1800 editing VTR

The Sony BVW-65 VTR

The Sony BVW-65 VTR

Three VTRs on 19-inch racks

Three VTRs on 19-inch racks

U-matic

MII (videocassette format)

D-1 (Sony)

D-2 (video)

D-3 (video)

D5 HD

D6 HDTV VTR

(D-7)

DVCPRO

DVCAM

(D-9)

Digital-S

(D-11)

HDCAM

(D-12)

DVCPRO HD

Ward, Peter (2001). Basic Betacam Camerawork. . ISBN 0-240-51604-4.

Focal Press

Sony professional cameras

Comparison Chart of Tape format Specs from Maxell

Betacam PALsite—over 70 pages of Betacam information, running since 2000

Sony Betamax Case Report