Narrow-bandwidth television
Narrow-bandwidth television (NBTV) is a type of television designed to fit into a low-bandwidth channel, in the extreme case using amateur radio voice frequency channels that only range up to a few kilohertz (though channels ranging into a few tens of kilohertz and beyond can also be used). This is in contrast to broadcast TV systems that use a channel about six to eight megahertz wide.
Design
There are two ways to make this work: reduce the scan rate, or reduce the image size. When the scan rate is reduced, this is referred to as slow-scan TV. With the latter type, the number of lines in an image may be reduced to just a few dozen. The earliest mechanical television systems often used narrow channels for sending moving images. Often, the images were only a few dozen lines in size. However, most narrow-bandwidth TV nowadays uses computers and other electronic systems.
Mechanical TV standards
Name | Details |
---|---|
Nipkow 1884 | 24 lines. Patent granted but Nipkow did not build a system. |
WGY, 2XAF, 2XAD | 24 lines, 21 frame/s, progressive scan |
England 1926 (Baird) | 30 lines, 5 frame/s, black-and-white experimental transmissions |
England 1928 (Baird) | 30 lines, 5 frame/s, first experimental colour TV transmissions |
2XAL New York 1928 | 48 lines, 7.5 frame/s, progressive scan |
Baird, England, 1928-32 | 30 lines, 12.5 frame/s, 3:7 vertical aspect ratio, vertical progressive scan, ~70x30 pixels per frame, sound, live TV from studio |
W9XAA/WCFL, W9XAO/WIBO, W9XAP/WMAQ (Western Television / Sanabria), Chicago, 1928-33 | 45 lines, 15 frame/s, 1:1 aspect ratio, triple interlace scan. Live TV from studio. (Above transmissions: Picture station / sound station)[1] |
W9XK/WSUI, Iowa City, Iowa (Used Western Television/Sanabria system), 1933-39 | 45 lines, 15 frame/s, 1:1 aspect ratio, triple interlace scan. Includes sound on WSUI. Educational TV pioneer. Live TV from studio. [1] |
Germany, France, 1930 | 30 lines, 12.5 frame/s, 3:4 aspect ratio, horizontal progressive scan |
New York City, Schenectady, Boston, 1930-31 | 48 lines, 15 frame/s, 6:5 aspect ratio, horizontal progressive scan |
W6XAO Los Angeles, 1931 | 80 lines, 20 frame/s, progressive scan |
W6XAH Bakersfield, 1931 | 96 lines, 20 frame/s, progressive scan |
New York, Schenectady, Boston, 1932 | 60 lines, 20 frame/s, 6:5 aspect ratio, horizontal progressive scan |
Berlin 1932 | 30 lines, 12.5 frame/s, 4:3 horizontal aspect ratio, ~40x30 pixels per frame, test movies and live images |
Königs Wusterhausen 1932 | 39 lines, 12.5 frame/s, 4:3 horizontal aspect ratio, ~31x30 pixels per frame, movies |
Doberitz 1932 | 48 lines, 25 frame/s, 4:3 horizontal aspect ratio, ~64x48 pixels per frame, sound, talking movies |
Berlin R.P.Z. 1932 | 60 lines, 25 frame/s, 4:3 horizontal aspect ratio, ~83x60 pixels per frame, test movies and live images |
Italy 1932 | 60 lines, 20 frame/s, 4:3 horizontal aspect ratio, ~45x60 pixels per frame, test movies and live images |
France 1932 | 60 lines, 12.5 frame/s, 3:7 vertical aspect ratio, vertical scanning ~35x60 pixels per frame, sound, live images |
Switzerland 1932 | 30 lines, 16.6 frame/s, 4:3 horizontal aspect ratio, ~40x30 pixels per frame, test movies and live images |
USSR 1932 | 30 lines, 12 frame/s |
Belgium 1932 | 30 lines, 12.5 & 16.6 frame/s, 4:3 horizontal aspect ratio, ~40x30 pixels per frame, sound, talking movies |
See also
- History of television
- List of experimental television stations
- Moving image formats
- Prewar television stations
- Television systems before 1940
References
- 1 2 "Early Chicago Television, Mechanical Tv, Ua Sanabria". Hawestv.com. Retrieved 2010-03-02.