
me at jonathanrogers
Mar 3, 2008, 4:11 PM
Post #4 of 7
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On Sat, Feb 9, 2008 at 1:23 AM, Michael T. Dean <mtdean [at] thirdcontact> wrote: > On 02/08/2008 08:18 PM, K Madman wrote: > > I recorded a show and saw on the left and right sides > > there are black bars in the actual recordings. I thought at first it > > was a problem with my pvr-150. Now I just put together a completely > > different mythtv box with a brand new pvr-150 and when it records it > > also has black lines on the side. The black lines are not from aspect > > ratio. On my old box everything was ok until I ran an update for > > mythtv. What causes them and how do I get rid of them? Please help. > > > > This is a snap shot from mythweb where you can clearly see the black > > bar on the left side of the recording. (little black bar on the right > > also) > > > > http://www.geocities.com/k7_madman85/SAMPLE.jpg > > You definitely have a problem. That problem is called NTSC (or, > perhaps, PAL). In other words the problem is you're using an analog > format that was defined to have unclean edges. > > If you want to get rid of the black bars: > a) overscan the video output so that the black bars are "displayed" > beyond the edges of your TV, > b) transcode the file and crop while transcoding > c) use the crop filter to crop the black bars while playing back the > recording You're absolutely right that the unclean edges that vary with different video sources is part of the nature of ancient analog TV design. I didn't really appreciate what overscan is and how much there is on a typical TV until I started capturing TV and displaying it on a PC monitor, which I configure to have no overscan and no underscan. I also have a MythTV machine with a PVR-150 and a PVR-350. The PVR-350 output looks great on a regular analog NTSC TV, since that's what it's designed for. It's output has a lot of overscan by default, which is fine for displaying the TV signals it and the PVR-150 record, but is annoying when the mythfrontend menus aren't completely visible, which requires configuring mythfrontend to make its window smaller than fullscreen. > > Note, though, > > So, the only real solution is to go to a format that has clean edges: > digital TV. Note, though, that if you get digital TV signal from > satellite/cable to a set top box and output to a PVR-x50, you'll get > black bars because the STB will be outputting analog (which is designed > to require overscan because of the unclean edges)... If you have analog > to the PVR-x50 (i.e. cable/antenna plugged directly into the capture > card), you may not see the black bars. Instead, you'll likely get > green/purple lines and jaggies and rainbows and waviness and other stuff > to replace the black bars. Unfortunately, even moving to all digital TV doesn't necessarily get rid of junk around the edges. The MythTV system I mostly use has two digital ATSC receivers and one PVR-150, which is seldom used. Quite a bit of new programs I record from local digital TV broadcasts are HD 720p or 1080i, and look very nice, with clean edges. However, the local stations still broadcast a lot of shows at SD 480i resolution digitally, and those broadcasts often have black bars on top and bottom, left and right, or both. Quite a few of these shows were designed to be shown with a 16:9 aspect ratio, but I have to use MythTV's fill mode to get them to fill the screen of my 16:9 HDTV. They also often have junk right at the top of the frame, which I think might be something like CC encoded in the VBI which was incorrectly included in the video frame when digitizing. -- Jonathan Rogers _______________________________________________ mythtv-users mailing list mythtv-users [at] mythtv http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users
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