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Silent Era Home Page  >  Home Video  >  Info  >  About the NTSC Standard Television Format
 
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About the
NTSC Standard
Television Format
 
The NTSC format (National Television Standards Committee)
was the standard-definition television format for the United States,
Canada, Japan, Mexico and other countries. The NTSC video format
definition (as applied to DVD home video products) is 30 (29.97)
interlaced frames per second at 480 vertical lines of resolution per
video frame. Each frame is composed of two fields, consisting of
262.5 scan lines per field for a total of 525 scan lines.

Home video products for use in the United States and Canada needed
to be in the NTSC format to properly display both picture and sound.
VHS and DVD home video products from Europe are manufactured
in the PAL television format and from France and Russia in the SECAM
television formats and they will not properly image on NTSC television
systems, as American media producers in the 1990s successfully
pressured disc player manufacturers to restrict playback access to
NTSC discs.

As with other standard television formats, NTSC is being phased out
for the generally universal DVB high-definition format.

More details on the NTSC standard video format may be found on Wikipedia.

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