1963 June 24
The quest for home video
Telcan

Photo: Terra Media Archives
The Telcan fixed-head longitudinal videotape recorder, an early device intended for use in
home-taping of television programmes. The recorder, mounted on the top of a television
cabinet, uses quarter-inch tape running at 120 ips past fixed heads, carrying two
15-minute tracks. The intended price is £61 19s (£61.90). It has been developed by
Norman Rutherford and Michael Turner of Nottingham Electronic Valve Company (NEVC), but
neither Telcan nor NEVC survive.
An actual model
can be found in Nottingham Industrial Museum. The website devoted to the country
house, Wollaton Park, where the museum is located, not only gives an incorrect date for Telcan's
invention but mischievously implies that Rutherford and Turner were the inventors of video
recording and that this was the breakthrough invention that lies behind all today's home
video. [It also claims that 'cat's eyes' used for marking the centre of roads were invented
by a Nottingham man, when everyoneand especially every Yorkshiremanknows they
were invented by a man named Percy Shaw from Boothtown, Halifax, Yorkshire, who became one of T S
Eliot's 'Bradford millionaires'.]
1963
The quest for home video
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