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Philips N1700
At first glance, the N1700 looks identical to the N1502, from two years before. Closer inspection shows that the controls have once again been re-designed - a sliding tracking control being the most obvious difference - but the most crucial difference between these two machines is not immediately visible, merely hinted at by the legend "LONG PLAY" on the case. In fact this machine used a new format, VCR-LP, which allowed it to record for well over two hours on a 60-minute VCR cassette. For the first time, an entire feature film could be held on a single video cassette.
Although VCR and VCR-LP machines used the same cassettes, the two formats were not compatible. The 1700 could not play recordings made on a 1500 or 1502 - unlike modern long-play VHS machines, which will always be able to play standard VHS recordings. No dual-standard VCR / VCR-LP machine was ever produced.
Shortly after the 1700 was released, a 1702 was produced which added a longer timer - able to be programmed up to two weeks ahead - and a few nicities like a test-signal generator to make tuning the TV into the machine's output simpler. The 1702 is identical to the 1700 apart from an extra digit on the timer display, and a slightly darker case colour. At the same time, three-hour cassettes were also released, using thinner tape to pack more into the cassette case.
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