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Claims  |
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I claim:
1. A method of playing back television picture signals, recorded in a
series of parallel tracks on magnetic tape, in selectively slowed or
accelerated picture motion, comprising the steps of:
operating a television tape record playback device at a tape transport
velocity different from the velocity of tape transport used for recording
the television signals recorded thereon while operating the playback heads
of said device at the same angle of scan used by said device for playback
at the velocity of tape transport used for recording;
temporarily storing only those signals that are picked up by the rotary
heads from said track portions which signals meet at least one
predetermined requirement;
temporarily storing, together with the signals meeting said predetermined
requirement, relating to a consecutive set of recorded television lines, a
picture address for said set of recorded television lines, and
reading out said temporarily stored signals under playback conditions in
accordance with a television signal standard in a sequence corresponding
to the picture addresses temporarily stored with said signals.
2. A method as defined in claim 1, in which said predetermined requirement
by which signals are selected for temporary storing in the temporary
storing step is a minimum signal amplitude.
3. A method as defined in claim 2, in which said predetermined requirement
is a minimum carrier wave amplitude of a frequency modulated carrier wave
constituting a portion of said signals.
4. A method as defined in claim 1, in which the step of storing a picture
address is performed by constituting the address out of a number
designating a half-picture, a number designating the record track among
the record tracks recording said half-picture and a number designating the
line within a recorded track for each line that is temporarily stored.
5. A method as defined in claim 1, which also includes the step of
recording, near the record of every television line, the number relating
to the sequence of said line record in the track in which it is recorded,
and in which the step of storing an address includes the substeps of:
counting cyclically the recorded fields on said magnetic tape by counting
recorded pulses designating the beginning of each field;
counting cyclically the tracks of each field by counting recorded pulses
designating the beginning of each track, reading the line number recorded
to identify each line within a track, and
temporarily storing with each line the current field and track count and
said line number as an address for said line.
6. A method as defined in claim 5, in which there are included the further
steps of:
detecting when in successive half-pictures a line having otherwise the same
address is temporarily stored, and
in response to detection of such temporary storage of corresponding lines
in successive half-pictures, varying the tape transport velocity just
enough to avoid such temporary storage and detection.
7. A method of playing back television picture signals, recorded in a
series of parallel tracks on magnetic tape, in selectively slowed or
accelerated picture motion, comprising the steps of:
operating a television tape record playback device at a tape transport
velocity different from the velocity of tape transport used for recording
the television signals recorded thereon while operating the playback heads
of said device at the same angle of scan used by said device for playback
at the velocity of tape transport used for recording;
controlling the tape transport speed at one of a predetermined set of
transport speeds;
providing a read-only memory of the lines of each track in a field sequence
that are capable of being adequately reproduced in successive scan traces
at each of said playback tape velocities with reference to a recording
tape velocity;
temporarily storing, under control of said read-only memory, the signals
corresponding to said lines identified by said read-only memory;
providing address information for said lines by said read-only memory;
reading out said temporarily stored signals under playback conditions in
accordance with a television signal standard in a sequence determined by
address information provided by said read-only memory.
8. A method as defined in claim 7, in which the step of controlling said
tape transport speed includes setting a relation between playback head
revolution rate and tape transport speed, maintaining said ratio by
comparing said rate and speed to generate an error signal and correcting
tape transport speed to reduce said error signal. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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This invention relates to the playback of tape recorded television signals,
and more particularly to a method of playing back a television signal,
which was recorded in a set of parallel tracks set obliquely across a
magnetic record tape, with a playback tape transport speed that is
different from, most usefully slower, than the tape transport speed used
for recording.
It is common in a magnetic video recorder to record television signals in a
series of separate tracks set at an angle to the longitudinal direction of
the magnetic tape that depends upon the conditions chosen for the
particular recording process. If it should be desired to reproduce signals
so recorded while adhering to the television standard conditions of the
recorded signal, it necessarily results that the changed transport
velocity of the tape prevents the path described by the reproducing head
or heads (which may be called the scanning traces) from "tracking" with
the recorded tracks.
In recording methods in which in every case a half-picture, which is to say
a first field of an interlaced two-field picture, is recorded on a single
track, this deviation of the scanning trace from the recorded track can be
compensated by a suitable automatic control of the magnetic head. In the
case of recording methods in which each field is spread over, and hence
subdivided into a number of tracks, such compensation is not possible,
because the neighboring track has an entirely different picture content.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a method of playing
back recordings in which a picture field is recorded in a plurality of
parallel tracks on the tape at a playback tape transport speed differing
significantly from the tape transport speed used for recording.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Briefly, the television signals picked up are temporarily stored so long as
they meet at least one predetermined requirement, which is preferably a
minimum amplitude requirement, the minimum amplitude requirement being
applied to the carrier wave in the case of a frequency modulated picture
signal. There is also stored a picture address with the stored signals so
that the position of the picture lines in question in the picture field
will be identified, which is important because the minimum amplitude
requirement is not continuously met. The stored signals are then read out
of storage in such a way that the output corresponds to the desired
television standard, in line scanning frequency and so on. Keeping track
of the picture location of each continuous string of lines temporarily
stored can be done very simply for particular speed ratios by putting them
into storage in accordance with a pattern depending upon the particular
selected ratio of the playback tape transport speed to the recording tape
transport speed. In a more general case, however, the addressing can be
done more explicity, preferably by forming the address digitally as a
number of which one part is a number identifying the field, another is a
number identifying the particular track making up the field and still
another part is a number representing the particular line within a track.
With such addressing, the playback method can be refined so that the tape
transport speed originally set on a continuously variable control is
modified whenever lines with the same picture address are temporarily
stored in successive fields, just enough to avoid such duplication.
The playback method of the present invention has the great advantage that
even in the case of video tape records in which a field is recorded in a
number of tracks, it is still possible to provide slow motion and fast
motion reproduction of the recorded pictures.
The invention is further described by way of illustrative embodiments with
reference to the annexed drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a diagram showing an array of record tracks and playback traces
corresponding to the playback method of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a diagram of the composition of a television picture played back
according to the method of the present invention;
FIG. 3 is a circuit diagram for carrying out the method of the present
invention;
FIG. 4 is a modification of a portion of the circuit of FIG. 3, and
FIG. 5 is another circuit diagram for carrying out the playback method of
the present invention.
FIG. 1 shows a section of magnetic tape 3 on which signals are recorded
according to the helical scan method that produces oblique parallel tracks
on the tape. For reasons of clearer presentation, the angle between the
tracks and the longitudinal direction of the tape is enlarged compared
with the method as applied in practice and the width of the tracks is
strongly exaggerated in the representation.
In addition to the oblique tracks, there is also shown a longitudinal
track, the so-called control track, by means of which the necessary
relation between tape transport speed and headwheel rotation is
maintained. In the illustrated example, a pulse is recorded on the
longitudinal track for identification of the beginning of each of the
other tracks. At the beginning of those tracks which contain the beginning
of a field, a pulse distinct from the other pulses is recorded on the
longitudinal track. Such pulses are designated with the reference numerals
1 and 2 in FIG. 1, while the control pulses lying between them are
designated 12, 13, 14 for one field and 22 and 23 for a portion of the
next.
In the described example, there are eight lines recorded in each track,
that are likewise numbered, so that each line has an address on the tape
that is made up of the number of the field, the number of the track within
the field and the number of the line within the track.
The television signal recorded according to the example thus has 32 lines
per field. Commonly, there are provided still more longitudinal tracks on
television magnetic recording tapes, for the accompanying sound, among
other things. These additional tracks are not shown in the drawings in
order to simplify the illustration.
If now a different transport speed is set for playback while maintaining
the rotary speed of the head wheel, the traces 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9 shown in
broken lines in FIG. 1 are scanned by the playback head. The steeper
inclination of the traces scanned by the playback head is caused by the
lower tape speed. This circumstance also results in the creation of more
scan traces than recorded tracks for a given tape length. Thus the scan
trace 5 gradually leaves the recorded track 11, so that the lines 1101 to
1105 or 1106, according to surrounding circumstances, can be played back.
For the present example, it will be assumed that the line 1105 still
provides satisfactory signals. These signals are stored, as explained more
fully below in connection with FIG. 3 and FIG. 5. The lines still lacking
of the first track 11 of the first field 1 will be obtained by the
scanning of record track 21, namely the first track of the second field,
at which time a sufficiently good tracking by the scanning trace will
occur, under the assumptions of the present example, for pickup of the
lines 2104 to 2108.
The trace 6 described by the magnetic head on playback does not deliver any
satisfactory signals at all, whereas the scan trace 7, by tracking
approximately with the record track 12 during the passage of the lines
1204 to 1208, delivers signals from these lines that are temporarily
stored.
FIG. 2 is a diagram of a television picture as it is temporarily stored,
for example after scanning over the first field on the tape. The limits of
the picture sections that correspond to the individual scan traces are
indicated by the lines 31, 32 and 33. The lines 34 and 35 designate the
television lines that are stored by pickup of the first field, thus the
lines 1101 to 1105 in one case and 1204 to 1208 in the other. In the
positions 36 and 37 that are still blank in FIG. 2, there will be inserted
the lines 2106 to 2108 and 2201 to 2203 during the second field.
Since the lines 2104 and 2105 provide adequate signals according to the
representation in FIG. 1, they will replace the already stored lines 1104
and 1105. Although in the above description of the present invention there
is mention of half-picture fields, this does not mean that the method is
limited to the storage of signals by half-picture fields, hence to
treating the lines 1101 and 2101 as lying in the same position. Within the
scope of the invention, it is entirely possible to store the signals of a
full picture. In general, however, it is generally sought, to compose all
the signals of a television picture out of as few fields or full pictures
as possible in the practice of the present invention, in order to minimize
any motion distortion produced in the process.
FIG. 3 is a block diagram of the circuit of equipment for carrying out the
method of the invention. The signals produced in the two magnetic heads 41
and 42 that are mounted on a headwheel 43 are supplied to a head transfer
switch 44 that is put in its upper position during one scan trace and in
the lower position during the next, and so on. The reproduced signals that
have the frequency modulation usual to video recording are processed by a
demodulator 45. The carrier frequency signals are supplied, besides to the
demodulator, also to a threshold switch 46. The threshold switch 46
provides a signal when the carrier frequency signals exceed a
predetermined amplitude, hence whenever the reproducing head tracks the
record track sufficiently well. In order that this signal should not begin
or stop within a line frequency period, but only at the beginning or
ending of lines, the signal is also coupled in a circuit 47 to which an H
pulse (line-synchronizing pulse) picked up a magnetic tape is also
supplied.
In the circuit 48, the signal thus produced is so correlated with the
demodulated video signals that only those video signals of lines for which
the carrier frequency amplitude is greater than a predetermined value
reach the selector switch 49.
The selector switch 49 is controlled in such a way that the signals of
respective lines are read into the stores 51, 52, 53, 54 and 55 in
accordance with their address. For simplification of the illustration,
only five stores are shown, but of course such a store is necessary for
each line of of a field or picture in the temporary memory. In accordance
with contemporary signal storage technology, digitally operating stores
with associated conversion of the signals into digital form can be
advantageously used.
The address of each line is provided in the embodiment illustrated in FIG.
3 in such a way that the number of every line is recorded already within a
track at the time of recording, for example in the horizontal blanking
period (H gap), so that the corresponding signal portions can be separated
and supplied to the circuit 50. The first two numbers (for example bcd
digits) of the address, namely the field and track numbers, however, are
produced on playback by counting at a counter 56 of the control pulses
I.sub.s produced by the control track pickup head 55.
The reading out of the signals from the stores is produced by the selector
switch 57 that is controlled by line-synchronous pulses H.sub.REF, so that
television signals in accordance with television reception standards are
available at the output 58 which are free of time errors but moreover,
could have resulted from the different rhythms of recording and
reporduction. The setting of the tape transport velocity is produced by a
setting device 59 that is connected to the capstan motor 60. Although only
a simple voltage-setting potentiometer is shown, it symbolizes more
sophisticated circuits that are well known in considerable variety, all
delivering a control voltage, and therefore not further described or
shown.
If the value set for the tape speed should produce the result that the same
lines are readable in successive fields and therefore should fail to fill
these collection of stores in the temporary memory, an error signal will
be produced by comparison of the addresses of the lines stored in two
successive fields, by means of the circuits 61 and 62, and the error
voltage will be supplied to the adding circuit 63 for modification of the
control voltage for the tape speed, so that the tape speed will be
slightly modified to avoid the duplication of some lines at the expense of
omitting others.
FIG. 4 shows another circuit for generation of the addresses. In this case,
the address of the track for a circuit like FIG. 3 is obtained by counting
of the control pulses I.sub.s, while the address of the lines is derived
by counting horizontal scan frequency pulses. Since horizontal scan
frequency pulses are not continuously obtainable from the magnetic tape,
these are regenerated by what may be regarded as a flywheel circuit
consisting of an oscillator 65 and a phase comparison circuit 64, and then
supplied to the counter 66.
As in the circuit of FIG. 3, in the circuit of FIG. 5 the signals generated
by the magnetic heads 41 and 42 are supplied over the transfer switch 44
and the demodulator 45 to the transfer switch 49. The storing of the
signals follows in the same way as in the case of FIG. 3, and likewise
their reading out. Only the ordering of the signals in the stores
according to their addresses is produced in a different way, which in the
case of the circuit of FIG. 5 is based on the basis that the tape
transport velocity for reproduction at speeds other than the recording
speed always stands at some predetermined ratio to the recording speed.
For this purpose, pulses produced by the control track head and by a
magnetic head 67 provided on a headwheel are respectively counted by the
counters 68 and 69. These counters are automatically reset upon reaching a
predetermined count, at which time a pulse is provided to a phase
comparison circuit 70. According to whether the pulse from the counter 68
leads or lags, the capstan motor 60 is braked or accelerated.
In a read-only memory 71, there are stored for a number of selectable
transport speeds the addresses of those lines that are usable for
reproduction. These addresses are supplied to the selector switch 49 in
accordance with the transport velocity set by the control device 72.
In the arrangement according to FIG. 5, there is not interruption of the
signal flow provided between the demodulator 45 and the selector switch
49. Instead, under control of the ROM 71, the switch 49 is put on a
contact 80 not connected to any store during line periods of poor
reproduction. Part of the address information in the ROM may be used to
control the location at which lines are stored in the temporary memory 51,
52, 53, . . . in order to simplify the operation of the switch 57 in
reproducing the lines in a sequence corresponding to their addresses. The
control circuit 72 is merely a tape speed selecting device controlled by a
suitable multi-position switch. It controls the speed by setting the ratio
of the number of turns of the headwheel, which operates at a constant
speed, to the number of track pulses picked up on the control track. At
the same time, it furnishes a signal I.sub.s that instructs the ROM how it
must respond to the field and track pulses provided from the head 55 and
to the line pulses (H) provided by the oscillator 75 in supplying
addresses for control of the switch 49 which, as will presently be
mentioned, generally, rather than a mechanical selector switch, is a
collection of addressing circuits of a random access memory.
The oscillator circuit 75 is necessary because line synchronization pulses
are not received for every line from the demodulator 45. These horizontal
scan frequency pulses are generated under a known synchronizing method by
means of a separator 3 that separates the line-synchronizing pulses that
are adequately received and furnishes them to a phase comparison circuit
74 which continuously corrects the frequency of the oscillator 75, which
operates as a "flywheel" and continually furnishes correctly timed
line-synchronizing pulses to the ROM 71.
As mentioned before, in both FIGS. 3 and 5, the selector switches 49 and 57
are only shown in mechanical switch representation for purposes of ready
comprehension. There are of course a wide variety of means available in
the electronics art for associative switching and corresponding
synchronized control for repartition of signals among various store units.
In general it should be said that the stores 51, 52, 53, . . . of FIGS. 3
and 5 are essentially store locations or "word" locations of a random
access memory having a memory matrix, address buffers, address decoders
and controlled by a "write and sense amplifier" through which data is
written in and read out. An illustrative description of such a random
access memory, operate of course by virtue of semiconductor devices
organized on integrated circuit units, is given at pp. S284-S286 of the
1974 supplement to the TTL Data Book published by Texas Instruments,
Incorporated, describing 64-bit random access memories of types SN54S289
and SN74S289, but of course for television signal line storage, a random
access memory with a larger bit capacity is necessary, these being made
available from a number of manufacturers on a commercial basis.
Commercially available memories of this type provide storage on a digital
basis and of course this means that ahead of the switch 49, an
analog-to-digital converter would be used, as is well understood, and that
following the output of the switch 57, a digital-to-analog converter would
be used. Such converters are also well known and commercially available
and the selection of particular models depends upon the number of bits
which it is desired to use to encode each of a succession of amplitude
samples, this being a question of the amplitude variation resolution
desired for the signals.
The circuit 47a which processes line-synchronizing pulses for printing the
gate 47 through which signals must pass in order to be temporarily stored,
of course as an input derived from a synchronizing pulse separator of
conventional type interposed in the amplification path of reproduced
signals and not shown in order not to complicate the illustration of FIG.
3. The synchronizing pulses are used to trigger a timing circuit, such as
a monostable multivibrator, which has a duration corresponding to the
period during which the signals of a recorded line are reproduced, and the
pulse produced by the timing circuit is furnished to the gate 47. The
triggering of the timing circuit is bias so that only line-synchronizing
pulses of a predetermined amplitude will trigger the timing circuit. If no
line-synchronizing pulse is reproduced or only a very weak one, the timing
circuit will not operate and even if the circuit 45 shows the beginning of
an adequately strong carrier wave after the line has begun, no enabling
signal will be passed by the gate 47 to the gate 48. On the other hand if
an adequate line-synchronizing signal is picked up, the gate 47 will be
opened for the line duration and any part of the line signals having an
adequate carrier amplitude will result in an enabling signal being passed
by the gate 47 to the gate 48.
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Description  |
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