The CV-2000 was developed by Sony engineer Nobutoshi Kihara. On its release, each machine cost US$695. It used half-inch wide videotape in an open-reel format, meaning the tape had to be manually threaded around the video head drum. The CV-2000 was one tenth the weight and price of other video recording products of its era. It recorded television programs in black and white using the skip field process, which produced a maximum 200 lines resolution. The tape moved at a speed of 7.5 inches per second (19cm/sec). Each reel of tape cost US$40, and could hold one hour of video. Although CV-2000 was aimed at the home market, it was mainly used in business and educational institutions.
Ten models were developed in the CV series: CV-2000, TCV-2010, TCV-2020, CV-2100, TCV-2110, TCV-2120, CV-2200, DV-2400, CV-2600 and CV-5100. Sony also sold an optional 'Video Camera Ensemble', known as the VCK-2000. This add-on kit contained a separate video camera, a microphone, and a tripod.
The CV video recorders fell into disuse with the arrival of color videocassette formats in the early 1970s.