Some more questions
So far, this thread helped a lot to understand some issues about VHS. Now I have some more questions. (Since my english is not that good I am also thankful for corrections about my writing.)
•(1)• How to calculate the resolution per line depending on the video bandwidth?
Lets say we have 3.47 MHz pure video bandwidth and 576 lines for 25 full frames per seconds (or 288 lines for 50 half-fields per seconds.) Since we have 14400 lines per second, 240 Hz per lines are left (if we just forget about HSync signals.)
Does that mean we have 480 "pixels" per line (since we can display 240x white + black) or do I have to consider that the phase information is eating the half of the bandwidth, leaving only 120x white + black (per line) left?
•(2)• For a PAL-TV-signal, I read about the QA-modulated color: "1.3 MHz from the lower sideband, and 0.64 MHz of the upper sideband are transmitted. (Original: "Es werden etwa 1,3 MHz des unteren Seitenbandes und 0,65 MHz des oberen Seitenbandes davon übertragen." from
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phase_Alternating_Line#Wahl_der_PAL-Farbtr.C3.A4gerfrequenz)
Does one sideband contains the amplitude spectrum while the other sideband contains the phase spectrum? As far as I know, both sidebands contain the same information, so I wonder why the upper sideband is neither entirely cut, nor transmitted with full bandwidth.
•(3)• Longplay (LP) for VHS – how does it work? Are the tracks even narrower so more tracks are on the tape (416 instead of 208 for SP on a PAL-VHS) or are the tracks just as half as long as in SP mode? Is the horizontal resulution lowered by a low-pass or does the magnetic particle densitiy limit the image resolution in VHS LP?
•(4)• What horizontal resolution VHS does
really have? I often read "240 lines". That is more than confusing. Do they mean 240 "pixels" per line? (I write "pixels" instead of pixels because due to the analogue recording I think it is not ok to talk about real pixels. As far as I recognized, due to its analogue nature an VHS image can show a black-white-transistion at any position inside a line, so that is not bound to a pixelized pattern. Buf of course, because of bandwidth limitations, there is a smallest detail which can stored on VHS. Lets talk about the width of that smallest possible single detail as "pixel size".) If I look at my VHS recordings, I consider that number of 240 too low. While checking my recorded images also saw that the horizontal resultion seems to be quite low for irregular patterns, while regular patterns got a higher resolution. Is that observation correct?
•(5)• I also still got some problems understanding the bandwidth consumption of modulation. Lets say we have a signal with 2 MHz bandwidth and a carrier frequency of 8 MHz. To transmit the modulated signal, we need the band of 6-10 MHz. (from 8-2 to 8+2.) Is that true for AM as well as FM? If we have two signals with 2 MHz bandwidth each, and modulate them on an 8 MHz Carrier with QAM, how broad is the modulated signal?
•(6)• I experience intensive "dot crawling" while watching VHS recordings. It is the same image quality degradation as if I use the composite cable instead of an RGB cable with my gaming consoles, only that the crawl patterns of VHS recordings are bigger. Therefore I think it is because of my recorder (connected with a SCART cable) does not support RGB or S-Video output and uses composite instead. Am I right or is that dot crawling a problem of VHS recording in general? Or is it a problem regarding the quality of the Scart-cable? If I watch TV with the VCR-tuner, I also recognize a degradation in image quality compared to the picture with my TV-tuner, but I think the difference is much smaller. So I am not sure about the influence of using a composite signal only instead of S-Video or RGB.
•(7)• Different sources talk about a colour noise reduction for VHS playback, but I still don't know how it is done. Is it simple color-averaging of two lines like in PAL?