Some Americans may have sent video
home movies to a European relative, only to discover that the images
are scrambled and the sound quality is very poor. This is caused by a
major difference in broadcast formats used by the United States and
many other countries. The United States favors a format called NTSC,
which is short for National Television Standards Committee, while
Europe, Australia and parts of Asia use a competing format called PAL,
or Phase Alternating Line.
Most
of us would not be able to recognize the difference between NTSC and
PAL, but then again most of us aren't television broadcast engineers.
The differences really start with the electrical power system behind
the transmissions. In the United States and other countries,
electrical power is generated at 60 hertz, so for technical reasons
the NTSC signal is also sent out at 60 'fields' per second. Since
most televisions use an interlaced system, this means that 30 lines of
the image are sent out, followed by the alternating 30 lines. This
line alternation happens so fast that it becomes undetectable, much
like a film running through a projector. The result for an NTSC
television is 30 frames of a complete image appearing every second.
Since Europe uses a 50 hertz
power supply, the equivalent PAL lines go out at 50 fields per second,
or 25 alternating lines. PAL televisions only produce 25 complete
frames per second, which can cause some problems with the proper
display of motion. Think of it as the 'silent movie effect', in which
the actors seem to move a little faster because there are fewer frames
showing movement. If a PAL movie is converted to an NTSC tape, 5
extra frames must be added per second or the action might seem jerky.
The opposite is true for an NTSC movie converted to PAL. Five frames
must be removed per second or the action may seem unnaturally slow.
Another difference between NTSC and
PAL formats is resolution quality. PAL may have fewer frames per
second, but it also has more lines than NTSC. PAL television
broadcasts contain 625 lines of resolution, compared to NTSC's 525.
More lines usually means more visual information, which equals better
picture quality and resolution. Whenever an NTSC videotape is
converted to PAL, black bars are often used to compensate for the
smaller screen aspect, much like letterboxing for widescreen movies.
When the NTSC format was first
adopted in 1941, there was little discussion of color transmissions.
When the technology for color television arrived, engineers had to
create a broadcast method which would still allow owners of monochrome
television sets to receive a picture. Color signals on the NTSC
format are still not considered ideal by electronics experts. The PAL
system, on the other hand, was created after the advent of color
broadcasting, so color signals are much truer to the original image.
For most purposes, the
difference between NTSC and PAL signals are negligible. A European
television set won't work in the United States and an NTSC formatted
DVD won't play on a PAL player. But many people own home movies which
cannot be viewed on a competing format. For this reason, there are a
number of companies which offer conversion kits from NTSC to PAL or
PAL to NTSC. Some of these conversion methods can be time-consuming
and variable in quality, but others provide an easy way to create a
PAL video for a European relative or an NTSC DVD for a Canadian
friend. Some electronic media outlets may also provide conversion
services for a price.
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