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PAL-to-NTSC

D

Dan Major

Jan 1, 1970
0
My brother brought me a bunch of video cameras back from an overseas
vacation. He got some really nice wires and wireless cameras. The problem
is that, without knowing any better, he got PAL format instead of NTSC. Is
there a cheap/easy way to convert the baseband signal? With the wireless
cameras - is the signal that is transmitted PAL or is it only encoded in
the receiver (meaning an NTSC receiver would work)? Thanks in advance (and
I know this is a stupid question, but I gotta ask).
 
T

Tam/WB2TT

Jan 1, 1970
0
Dan Major said:
My brother brought me a bunch of video cameras back from an overseas
vacation. He got some really nice wires and wireless cameras. The
problem
is that, without knowing any better, he got PAL format instead of NTSC.
Is
there a cheap/easy way to convert the baseband signal? With the wireless
cameras - is the signal that is transmitted PAL or is it only encoded in
the receiver (meaning an NTSC receiver would work)? Thanks in advance
(and
I know this is a stupid question, but I gotta ask).

Do you really mean cameras, or camcorders? Do you want to convert in real
time?

Tam
 
R

Richard Crowley

Jan 1, 1970
0
My brother brought me a bunch of video cameras back
from an overseas vacation. He got some really nice wires
and wireless cameras. The problem is that, without knowing
any better, he got PAL format instead of NTSC. Is there a
cheap/easy way to convert the baseband signal?

Does "cheap" to you mean something on the order of $100 each?
With the wireless cameras - is the signal that is transmitted
PAL or is it only encoded in the receiver (meaning an NTSC
receiver would work)?

Everything about them is PAL. Only receivable on
PAL receivers.
 
J

John Woodgate

Jan 1, 1970
0
I read in sci.electronics.design that Richard Crowley
...

Does "cheap" to you mean something on the order of $100 each?


Everything about them is PAL. Only receivable on PAL receivers.

UnPALatable information!
 
D

dave

Jan 1, 1970
0
My brother brought me a bunch of video cameras back from an overseas
vacation. He got some really nice wires and wireless cameras. The problem
is that, without knowing any better, he got PAL format instead of NTSC. Is
there a cheap/easy way to convert the baseband signal? With the wireless
cameras - is the signal that is transmitted PAL or is it only encoded in
the receiver (meaning an NTSC receiver would work)? Thanks in advance (and
I know this is a stupid question, but I gotta ask).

No it's not possible on that small scale. The conversion equipment would cost
way more than the cameras. The wireless link is irrelevant, the problem is
that both the scan rate and the colour subcarrier are different and both are
very very difficult to change. Most modern TV's will display either however.
At least, most pAL tv's will display NTSC okay, but I'm not sure about the
reverse as I live in a PAL country.
 
D

Dan Major

Jan 1, 1970
0
Do you really mean cameras, or camcorders? Do you want to convert in
real time?
Yes, cameras. Lttle things about an inch square and half-inch thick. Need
conversion in real time.
 
At least, most pAL tv's will display NTSC okay, but I'm not sure about the
reverse as I live in a PAL country.

I was surprised to find this, but multisystem TVs are rare and
expensive here in the US. They really want to enforce NTSC only :)

Even 50Hz field rate with NTSC color encoding doesn't work on most TV
sets here. Culture shock, since at the time I left Australia
practically all TV sets bigger than about 14" were multisystem.
 
D

Dan Major

Jan 1, 1970
0
No it's not possible on that small scale. The conversion equipment
would cost way more than the cameras. The wireless link is
irrelevant, the problem is that both the scan rate and the colour
subcarrier are different and both are very very difficult to change.
Most modern TV's will display either however. At least, most pAL tv's
will display NTSC okay, but I'm not sure about the reverse as I live
in a PAL country.

Thanks. Didn't think it would be worthwhile. The simplest solution it
seems, is to use a computer video capture card. These are capable of using
either a PAL or NTSC baseband video.
 
F

Frank Bemelman

Jan 1, 1970
0
Dan Major said:
My brother brought me a bunch of video cameras back from an overseas
vacation. He got some really nice wires and wireless cameras. The problem
is that, without knowing any better, he got PAL format instead of NTSC. Is
there a cheap/easy way to convert the baseband signal? With the wireless
cameras - is the signal that is transmitted PAL or is it only encoded in
the receiver (meaning an NTSC receiver would work)? Thanks in advance (and
I know this is a stupid question, but I gotta ask).

Your best chance is to sell them on Ebay. List them on
Ebay in Germany (www.ebay.de) as one lot, starting at
1 euro, so you will be sure that you have a buyer.

If you intend to use them with a PC, most video grabbers
support both NTSC and PAL.
 
S

Spehro Pefhany

Jan 1, 1970
0
Yes, cameras. Lttle things about an inch square and half-inch thick. Need
conversion in real time.

Sell the cameras to someone in the UK or wherever else they use PAL
and buy NTSC ones. He bought them in China, right?


Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany
 
R

Richard Crowley

Jan 1, 1970
0
<larwe wrote ...
I was surprised to find this, but multisystem TVs are rare and
expensive here in the US. They really want to enforce NTSC only :)

Nah. For better or for worse, NTSC is the "Rev. 0" of compatible
color schemes, and PAL came along and learned from our mistakes.

Add that to the fact that the US is a bigtime net EXporter of movies
and TV and it makes it much less economically viable to produce
multi-standard TVs, VCRs, etc.
Even 50Hz field rate with NTSC color encoding doesn't work on most TV
sets here. Culture shock, since at the time I left Australia
practically all TV sets bigger than about 14" were multisystem.

Kinda. They don't support true NTSC, do they? Just PAL60?
 
M

mc

Jan 1, 1970
0
Dan Major said:
My brother brought me a bunch of video cameras back from an overseas
vacation. He got some really nice wires and wireless cameras. The
problem
is that, without knowing any better, he got PAL format instead of NTSC.
Is
there a cheap/easy way to convert the baseband signal? With the wireless
cameras - is the signal that is transmitted PAL or is it only encoded in
the receiver (meaning an NTSC receiver would work)? Thanks in advance
(and
I know this is a stupid question, but I gotta ask).

The signals are entirely different. There is a small possibility that the
chips in the camera are capable of producing both formats (PAL and NTSC) and
you just need to set a jumper or something.
 
M

Matthias Melcher

Jan 1, 1970
0
Even 50Hz field rate with NTSC color encoding doesn't work on most TV
Kinda. They don't support true NTSC, do they? Just PAL60?

Pretty much all modern video equipment in Europa supports PAL and NTSC.
I am using DV tapes recorded in NTSC on my PAL DV Cam and vice versa,
play NTSC DVD's frm my DVD player and pllay my daughters U.S. "Elmo"
tapes (shudder) through my PAL VHS onto my PAL TV every day.

The problem is much less that there is not enough PAL content that the
U.S. would want to watch. It is a lot easier for TV manufacturers to use
the same chip in all TV's world wide. The issue is regulations in the US
that want to "protetct" you from watchinga foreign tape that was not
sanctioned by Hollywood or any other of the Big Media.

Ever heard of Country Codes on DVDs? The prohibit that you can play a
SOuth American DVD on a North America DVD player, even if both are NTSC.
Country Code are an invention by the movie industry to make perfectly
fine viedo systems incompatible.

In Europe, no one gives a damn about Country Codes, and you can buy
Country Code free DVD players legaly everywhere, but try that in the
U.S. . If you happen to find that copy of "Run Lola Run" on your
vacation to Germany, you will not be able to watch it when you come
home, not because your player couldn;t, but simply because one tiny byte
on the DVD says: you spent your money in the wrong country.
 
J

Joel Kolstad

Jan 1, 1970
0
Matthias Melcher said:
In Europe, no one gives a damn about Country Codes, and you can buy
Country Code free DVD players legaly everywhere, but try that in the
U.S.

It's pretty easy... huge on-line retailers such as Buy.Com and Amazon.Com sell
those "off-brand" DVD players that usually just need a "magic code" sequence
entered through the remote to enable all region playback. I bought one two
Thanksgivings ago to give to a friend here in the U.S. with a Taiwanese
wife -- they wanted to be able to playback DVDs they obtained in Taiwan for
their daughter.
 
P

Pooh Bear

Jan 1, 1970
0
Joel said:
It's pretty easy... huge on-line retailers such as Buy.Com and Amazon.Com sell
those "off-brand" DVD players that usually just need a "magic code" sequence
entered through the remote to enable all region playback. I bought one two
Thanksgivings ago to give to a friend here in the U.S. with a Taiwanese
wife -- they wanted to be able to playback DVDs they obtained in Taiwan for
their daughter.

It's utterly ridiculous that the public is forced to go to those lengths to be
able to play what they legally bought in another country though.

Imagine the uproar if music CDs were coded that way so you could only play it in
the region you bought it. Region coding is a form of trade restraint by another a
name.

It's bitten Hollywood back anyway. Bit Torrent etc.

Graham
 
G

Glenn Gundlach

Jan 1, 1970
0
Pooh said:
It's utterly ridiculous that the public is forced to go to those lengths to be
able to play what they legally bought in another country though.

Imagine the uproar if music CDs were coded that way so you could only play it in
the region you bought it. Region coding is a form of trade restraint by another a
name.

It's bitten Hollywood back anyway. Bit Torrent etc.

Graham

Different take on this, Graham. I don't have any reason to play out of
country tapes and don't wish to pay a higher price for a TV that
supports something I'm very unlikely to need. The company that offered
a simpler (cheaper) TV that only displayed NTSC would quickly become
dominant (which is exactly how it is). Nobody PROHIBITS you from having
multistandard equipment, its just that few need it.

CDs all use the same sample rate. Imposing region code on them WOULD be
restraint of trade. Video is a different animal. Different subcarrier
encoding schemes, line rates and frame rates. Knowing I can't play a
disc or tape from UK, I wouldn't buy it unless I was willing to pay for
a standards conversion.

GG
 
P

Pooh Bear

Jan 1, 1970
0
Glenn said:
Different take on this, Graham. I don't have any reason to play out of
country tapes and don't wish to pay a higher price for a TV that
supports something I'm very unlikely to need. The company that offered
a simpler (cheaper) TV that only displayed NTSC would quickly become
dominant (which is exactly how it is). Nobody PROHIBITS you from having
multistandard equipment, its just that few need it.

Realistically, the same chipsets are used in TVs worldwide.

I doubt that there's much economy to be had in making an NTSC only set. I imagine any
'savings' are illusory.

CDs all use the same sample rate. Imposing region code on them WOULD be
restraint of trade. Video is a different animal. Different subcarrier
encoding schemes, line rates and frame rates. Knowing I can't play a
disc or tape from UK, I wouldn't buy it unless I was willing to pay for
a standards conversion.

You're just thinking of USA vs ROTW. Region coding disallows the playback of *entirely*
compatible media based purely on geographic location. NTSC is virtually exclusive to
America, maybe even just the North and most of the rotw is PAL ( or SECAM if you're
French / French influenced ).

Graham
 

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