Yeah, I never could have afforded it when it was new. Well, I was only 10 years old in 1985, so that goes without saying, but my parents would have scoffed at the idea of paying that much for just about anything other than a used car or a major home improvement project.
We didn't get a VCR until Christmas of '88, and it was about $250 new: a General Electric VG-7720, manufactured by Panasonic (as far as I know, no VHS VCR was ever made by an American company; all the ones with ostensibly American brand names such as Zenith, GE, RCA, Magnavox, were made by Japanese or Korean companies). It had the same basic design as the $299 Panasonic Omnivision here:
https://christmas.musetechnical.com/ShowCatalogPage/1988-Sears-Christmas-Book/0665
It even had that same remote control, except with GE branding of course. It worked good, though it was far from high-end. It didn't have Hi-Fi Stereo, but it did have HQ circuitry (most likely the watered down implementation of it) and 4 heads, which gave a very stable freeze-frame image, more so than most other 4-head VCRs even. It also had a slow-motion and frame-advance function, which seemed awesome at the time. I still have it, though it needs new capacitors.
You can't set the current date on it anymore because it maxes out at 2006 or so. I discovered its date limit when I was a kid playing around with it, and at the time it seemed like some incredibly futuristic date that would never arrive.
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