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Early digi in analog?
I have a copy of the 1936 RCA Blue Book on the developments by all the RCA engineers in the day. There is something for everyone in the 452 pages. But page 266 had a paragraph that jumped out at me as a latter day director and engineer well versed in analog and digital video manipulation that we all know now. They discovered a trick to electrically manipulate the Iconoscope to move the video around like our early digital tricks.
I will paraphrase a bit and include quotes as needed. What they discovered is that the target plate of the Iconoscope was so good, the electronics that followed could not reproduce the full resolution of the mosaic. So they started playing around and did a few tricks which never made it to production that I know of. "...it is possible to scan an area considerably smaller than the full size of the plate before the resolution of the plate becomes the limiting factor". "By adjusting the position of the scanning pattern to various sections of the mosaic, the effect of turning the camera may also be obtained." In other words, reduce the scan area to the point of compatibility with the circuts. The trick was to introduce DC at H/V rates in to the sawtooth to shrink the scanned area. This gives you a cutout scan inside the full plate which is still getting the "wide" shot but only showing your cutout. You could "zoom" the camera to a center spot. You could "pan" the camera to a side image closeup or a pan across the stage and then revert to the original stationary wide shot. A camera op or video engineers nightmare. It is underscan anyway you look at. So is an 8k digi replay with a box showing the wide receiver fumble. RCA...been there...done that.
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“Once you eliminate the impossible...whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth." Sherlock Holmes. Last edited by Dave A; 07-01-2024 at 04:59 PM. |
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