Legacy Video Formats — Practical Resolution & Identification Guide

This page provides a clear, engineering-grade overview of the real-world resolution, physical characteristics and capture considerations for the most common legacy video and cine film formats.


Cassette Silhouettes & Dimensions

VHS
187 × 103 × 25 mm

S‑VHS
187 × 103 × 25 mm

VHS‑C
92 × 58 × 20 mm

Video8
95 × 62.5 × 15 mm

Hi8
95 × 62.5 × 15 mm

Digital8
95 × 62.5 × 15 mm

MiniDV
66 × 48 × 12 mm

MicroDV
46 × 30 × 8 mm

Betamax
156 × 96 × 25 mm

Betacam SP
167 × 103 × 25 mm

U‑matic (Low/High/SP)
210 × 130 × 25 mm


Format Resolution Overview


NTSC, PAL & SECAM — Practical Differences

Parameter NTSC PAL SECAM
Frame rate 29.97 fps 25 fps 25 fps
Vertical resolution 480i 576i 576i
Colour encoding YIQ YUV FM-modulated chroma
Chroma stability Lower Higher Very high
Playback compatibility NTSC decks only PAL decks only SECAM or multi-standard decks

DV Family Comparison (Consumer & Professional)

Format Codec Resolution Tape Size Transport Stability Playback Hardware
MiniDV DV25 ~500–530 lines 66 × 48 × 12 mm Excellent DV decks & camcorders
Digital8 DV25 ~500–530 lines 95 × 62.5 × 15 mm Good Digital8 camcorders only
MicroDV DV25 ~500–530 lines 46 × 30 × 8 mm Fragile MicroDV camcorders only
DVCAM DV25 (locked audio) ~500–530 lines Mini / Standard Very high Sony DVCAM decks
DVCPRO DV25 (Panasonic) ~500–530 lines Mini / Medium / Large Extremely high Panasonic DVCPRO decks

Recommended Capture Path

Analogue Formats

Digital Tape Formats


AI Upscaling — Practical Reality Check

AI upscaling tools promise dramatic improvements, but real-world results vary widely. Consumer analogue formats contain limited detail, high noise and unstable chroma — conditions AI models struggle with.

Recommendation: Preserve the original signal. Apply only light, reversible enhancement if needed. AI upscaling should be considered optional and experimental.