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[1.19] Is DVD-Video a worldwide standard?
Does it work with NTSC, PAL, and SECAM?
The MPEG video on a DVD is stored in digital format, but it's
formatted for one of two mutually incompatible television systems:
525/60 (NTSC) or 625/50 (PAL/SECAM). Therefore, there are two kinds
of DVDs: "NTSC DVDs" and "PAL DVDs." Some players only play NTSC
discs, others play PAL and NTSC discs. Discs are also coded for
different regions of the world (see 1.10).
Almost all DVD players sold in PAL countries play
both kinds of discs. These multi-standard players partially
convert NTSC to a 60-Hz PAL (4.43 NTSC) signal. The player uses
the PAL 4.43-MHz color subcarrier encoding format but keeps the
525/60 NTSC scanning rate. Most modern PAL TVs can handle this "pseudo-PAL"
signal. A few multi-standard PAL players output true 3.58 NTSC from
NTSC discs, which requires an NTSC TV or a multi-standard TV. Some
players have a switch to choose 60-Hz PAL or true NTSC output when
playing NTSC discs. There are a few standards-converting
PAL players that convert from an NTSC disc to standard PAL output
for older PAL TVs. Proper "on the fly" standards conversion requires
expensive hardware to handle scaling, temporal conversion, and object
motion analysis. Because the quality of conversion in DVD players
is poor, using 60-Hz PAL output with a compatible TV provides a
better picture than converting from NTSC to PAL. (Sound is not affected
by video conversion.) The latest software tools such as Adobe After
Effects and Canopus ProCoder do quite a good job of converting
between PAL and NTSC at low cost, but they are only appropriate
for the production environment (converting the video before it is
encoded and put on the DVD). See Snell and Wilcox's The
Engineer's Guide to Standards Conversion and The
Engineer's Guide to Motion Compensation for technical details
of conversion.
Most NTSC players can't play PAL discs. A very
small number of NTSC players (such as Apex and SMC) can convert
PAL to NTSC. External converter boxes are also available, such as
the Emerson EVC1595 ($350). High-quality converters are available
from companies such as TenLab
and Snell and Wilcox.
Many standards-converting players can't convert
anamorphic widescreen video for 4:3 displays. See 1.22.
There are three differences between discs intended
for playback on different TV systems: picture dimensions and pixel
aspect ratio (720x480 vs. 720x576), display frame rate (29.97 vs.
25), and surround audio options (Dolby Digital vs. MPEG audio).
(See 3.4 and 3.6 for details.)
Video from film is usually encoded at 24 frames/sec but is preformatted
for one of the two required display rates. Movies formatted for
PAL display are usually sped up by 4% at playback, so the audio
must be adjusted accordingly before being encoded. All PAL DVD players
can play Dolby Digital audio tracks, but not all NTSC players can
play MPEG audio tracks. PAL and SECAM share the same scanning format,
so discs are the same for both systems. The only difference is that
SECAM players output the color signal in the format required by
SECAM TVs. Note that modern TVs in most SECAM countries can also
read PAL signals, so you can use a player that only has PAL output.
The only case in which you need a player with SECAM output is for
older SECAM-only TVs (and you'll probably need a SECAM RF connection,
see 3.1).
A producer can choose to put 525/60 NTSC video
on one side of the disc and 625/50 PAL on the other. Most studios
put Dolby Digital audio tracks on their PAL discs instead of MPEG
audio tracks.
Because of PAL's higher resolution, the movie usually
takes more space on the disc than the NTSC version. See 3.4 for more details.
There are actually three types of DVD players if
you count computers. Most DVD PC software and hardware can play
both NTSC and PAL video and both Dolby Digital and MPEG audio. Some
PCs can only display the converted video on the computer monitor,
but others can output it as a video signal for a TV.
Bottom line: NTSC discs (with Dolby Digital
audio) play on over 95% of DVD systems worldwide. PAL discs play
on very few players outside of PAL countries. (This is irrespective
of regions -- see 1.10.)
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