Reverse Standards Conversion
Reverse Standards Conversion or RSC is a process developed by the BBC for the restoration of video recordings which have already been converted between different video standards using early conversion techniques.
Contents
- 1 Historical justifications for its use
- 2 PAL -> NTSC conversion (c. 1968)
- 3 Double conversion problems
- 4 Summary
- 5 Programs recovered by this precess
- 6 See also
- 7 Further reading
Historical justifications for its use
Many programs produced by the BBC in PAL in the 60s and 70s were converted to NTSC for distribution to non-625 line markets. For many reasons, including the cost of video tape at the time, the original PAL master was often overwritten with new material or was simply discarded. This often left the NTSC version as the only remaining copy.
PAL -> NTSC conversion (c. 1968)
PAL and NTSC have a differing number of lines of resolution and also use a
different field rate. Traditional standards conversion techniques adopted
interpolation as a way to cater for the differences between line resolution and
field frequency.
What the original BBC converter tried to do (using the limited technology of
the day) was to minimise judder by choosing either one 50Hz field or a 1/2-1/2
mix of two 50Hz fields, whichever was "nearer" to the temporal position of the
target 60Hz field. This gives a sequence like this (Nx = 60Hz field x, Py =
50Hz field y):
N0 = P0 (ideal = 0, error = 0)
N1 = P1 (ideal = 0.83, error = 0.17)
N2 = (P1 + P2) / 2 (ideal = 1.67, error = -0.17)
N3 = (P2 + P3) / 2 (ideal = 2.5, error = 0)
N4 = (P3 + P4) / 2 (ideal = 3.33, error = 0.17)
N5 = P4 (ideal = 4.17, error = -0.17)
N6 = P5 (ideal = 5, error = 0, start of next group)
Simply taking the nearest raw field would produce a peak to peak "error" of
0.83, instead of 0.33.
This approach of interpolation results in some of the image data present in the
PAL source material being merged between lines / fields of the resultant NTSC
version.
Double conversion problems
Attempts to convert the NTSC version back to PAL format using traditional conversion processes yielded unsatisfactory results. Such double conversions produce artifacts that manifest themselves as jerkiness in the picture where movement is present, and in soft-looking pictures.
Using interpolation processes to convert source material twice-over (in this example, PAL->NTSC->PAL) causes the artefacts previously mentioned to be exacerbated.
Summary
RSC was developed as an alternative to double-conversion. Use of RSC
bypasses the generation of the artefacts that would be introduced in a normal
NTSC->PAL conversion, and actually reverses the early standards conversion
method used to create the NTSC copies. RSC is the result of reverse engineering
the method of conversion inherent in the old traditional BBC PAL -> NTSC
converter.
RSC attempts to separate the information from the merged lines and fields of
the NTSC conversion.
One of the problems inherent in this is that of increased noise. RSC employs
techniques to minimise the resultant noise - both in the separation process
itself, and in preparation of the NTSC material prior to processing through use
of HF linear filtering.
Programs recovered by this precess
Early examples of material processed for commercial re-release using RSC are the Doctor Who stories The Claws of Axos (1971) and Inferno (1970). The resulting DVD release of The Claws of Axos also contained a documentary about the Reverse Standards Conversion process. It includes a split screen comparison between the source NTSC version and the final RSC processed version. The Inferno DVD does not feature this comparison, in special features. The process has since made it to a Doctor Who DVD once more for Episodes 1 - 3 of "The Sea Devils" (1972). All stories needing RSC have already been processed and so ready for release when the picture has been restored to match.
See also
Television standards conversion
Further reading
Related research
- Williams, Adrian and James Insell. 2005. "Reverse Standards Conversion", BBC Research and Development.
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