I'm the guy who was wondering in the eailier post. Composite video can come in three different standards - NTSC, PAL, and SECAM. The main differences are the number of lines in the picture, the frame rate, and the frequency of the subcarrier used for color information. If the VD-01 displays in B&W then most of the differences from PAL and NTSC are not involved (since they have to do with color subcarrier frequencies). The lines per frame and scanning rates (625lines@50hz vs 525lines@60Hz) probably don't matter much with this type of signal. They would with the output of a video player. If you want the nitty-gritty on the formats:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Composite_video
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NTSC
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PAL
-James
On Dec 31, 2009, at 4:37 PM,
DAVEVOSH@...
wrote:
>
>
> hello,
> during some recent postings about the vd-01 someone wondered whether it
> output a "pal" or "ntsc" signal. my reply was that i used it with both an
> old tube composite video monitor and a modern flat screen one.
> on reflection, i found myself wondering if the "pal / ntsc" even mattered
> -
> my reaoning - and i could be grossly wrong as i`m in no way a video expert
> - is that the vd-01 puts out a composite video signal. "pal / ntsc" are
> television signal transmission standards and shouldn`t matter with a
> direct video image.
> question - is this right or wrong anyone know
> best,
> dave
>
>
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