720 x 486 versus 720 x 480 – Apple Final Cut Pro 5 User Manual

Page 1707

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356

Part V

Appendixes

Common video frame sizes are shown in the table below.

Width

Height

Pixel
aspect ratio

Screen
aspect ratio Description

320

240

1:1

4:3

Used for web distribution or offline video
editing

640

480

1:1

4:3

An early standard for analog-to-digital
video editing, and an ATSC video
specification

720

1

480

Height
greater than
width

4:3

NTSC DV and DVD image dimensions

720

1

486

Height
greater than
width

4:3

NTSC standard definition video dimensions
used for professional digital formats such as
Digital Betacam, D-1, D-5, as well as DVD
and DV.

720

1

576

Width
greater than
height

4:3

PAL standard definition video dimensions
used for all digital formats such as Digital
Betacam, D-1, D-5, as well as DVD and DV.

1280

720

1:1

16:9

A high definition video format, capable of
higher frame rates in exchange for smaller
image dimensions

1920

1280

1:1

16:9

A high definition video format with very
high resolution, comparable to the
resolution of a film projection print

1

In most video devices, only 704 or 708 pixels are actually used for picture information.

720 x 486 Versus 720 x 480

Another issue that comes up is the subtle difference between NTSC SD formats that
use 486 lines per frame (Digital Betacam, D-1, D-5) and formats that use 480 lines per
frame (DV, DVCPRO, DVD). Why is there this subtle difference? The reason is
simple: 480 is divisible by 16, and 486 isn’t. Divisibility by 16 is important for any
MPEG-like compression codec, because each frame is broken into 16 x 16 pixel blocks
(known as macroblocks) during compression. All of the video formats that use 480
lines per frame are DV or MPEG-based compressions, all of which use similar
approaches to compression.

The only time this should be a concern is if you are converting between a 486-line
format like Digital Betacam and a 480-line format like DVD. However, the absence of 6
lines is hardly noticeable on an analog television, especially at the top and bottom,
which is usually masked anyway.

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