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- Duration: 8:15
- Published: 26 Mar 2010
- Uploaded: 28 Aug 2011
- Author: freefullvideos
HD-MAC could be decoded by a standard D2-MAC receivers(SDTV), but in that mode only 625 (576) lines and certain artifacts were visible. To decode the signal in full resolution required a specific HD-MAC tuner.
36 MHz were required to broadcast in HD-MAC (PAL SDTV uses 6-, 7- (VHF), or 8 MHz (UHF)). Because UHF spare bandwidth was very scarce, HD-MAC was usable "de facto" only to cable and satellite providers, where there bandwidth was less constricted. However, the standard never became popular among broadcasters. For all this, analog HDTV could not replace conventional SDTV(terrestrial) PAL/SECAM, making HD-MAC sets unattractive to potential consumers.
It was required that all high-powered satellite broadcasters to use MAC from 1986. However, the launch of middle-powered satellites by SES Astra and the use of PAL allowed broadcasters to bypass HD-MAC, reducing their transmission costs. HD-MAC (the high-definition variant of MAC) was left for transcontinental satellite links, however.
In the 1992 Summer Olympics, an experimental HD-MAC broadcasting took place. 100 HD-MAC receivers (in that time, retroprojectors) in Europe were used to test the capabilities of the standard. This project was financed by the EEC. The PAL-converted signal was used by mainstream broadcasters such as SWR, BR and 3Sat.
The HD-MAC standard was abandoned in 1993, and since then all EU and EBU efforts have focused on the DVB system (Digital Video Broadcasting), which allows both SDTV and HDTV.
The signal was captured with 50 full frames per second, each at a resolution of 2048×1152. To increase horizontal resolution of the D2-MAC norm, only its bandwidth had to be increased. This was easily done as unlike PAL, the sound is not sent on a sub-carrier, but multiplexed with the picture. However, to increase vertical bandwidth was more complex, as the line frequency had to stay at 15'625 Hz to be compatible with D2-MAC. This offered three choices:
As none of the three modes would have been sufficient, the choice during encoding was not made for the whole picture, but for little blocks of 8×8 pixels. The signal then contained hints that controlled which de-interlacing method the decoder should use. To fully decode the picture, the signal had to be digitized and then read from the memory several times.
Related standards:
Category:Television technology Category:High-definition television
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