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Andrew VK3BFA wrote:
thats interesting - us in OZ had the same VHF output system years ago, but when we got UHF broadcasting, all the VCR's went to UHF output. Most (if not all) are tunable over a narrow range,(via a trimmer cap on the rear panel) some of the more exotic ones (even from dumpster diving) have user settable(sp) output with the actual RF frequency on screen - makes a crude UHF sig gen. UHF in the States long predates the VCR. But that may be why we stuck with VHF output -- because early UHF tuners were pretty bad and many Americans had experience with their poor stability and difficult tuning. So the VCRs with on-screen frequency setting are also continuously variable? I mean, you can select a RF frequency that doesn't correspond to a valid Australian channel? The advantage of the UHF output over the older VHF only is no co-channel QRM from the strong Ch3 signal to local on air channels. True. (though with the dawn of digital TV in the States I'm not so sure that's enough anymore! Here in the Nashville area we have stations on channels 20, 21, 23, 24, 26, 27, 28, and 30 among many others...) Cable TV boxes use the same modulators as VCRs. CBS-TV had a serious problem when they began digital broadcasts in Chicago a few years ago. They'd been assigned channel 3 for their digital transmitter, and it clobbered the cable boxes. Of course, QRM on the boxes' output channel meant that it clobbered *every* channel on the cable! Agree with the different standards - nowadays, this is not an issue as even the el cheapo VCR's are multi-standard. Saves having to manufacture for different markets, and the new chipsets for this are dirt cheap. Most new ones have an integrated tuner/if/video conversion "can" - unfortunately, bus controlled so difficult to experiment with unless you are comfortable with microprocessors. I aint - firmly rooted in the analog domain! Multistandard equipment is more common in the US than it used to be, but it's still pretty rare. I only know of two variants of NTSC - the one used in Japan, and the one used in all other NTSC countries including the US - and they vary only in the RF carrier frequencies used. (even sound-vision separation is the same) Still, American equipment cannot (usually) be switched to receive Japanese frequencies. Yeah, my microcontroller experience is pretty limited as well! -- Doug Smith W9WI Pleasant View (Nashville), TN EM66 http://www.w9wi.com |
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