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Test card

A test card, also known as a test pattern or start-up/closedown test, is a television test signal, typically broadcast at times when the transmitter is active but no program is being broadcast (often at sign-on and sign-off).[1]

SMPTE color bars: common NTSC test pattern
PM5544: common PAL test pattern

Used since the earliest TV broadcasts, test cards were originally physical cards at which a television camera was pointed, allowing for simple adjustments of picture quality.[2] Such cards are still often used for calibration, alignment, and matching of cameras and camcorders. From the 1950s, test card images were built into monoscope tubes which freed up the use of TV cameras which would otherwise have to be rotated to continuously broadcast physical test cards during downtime hours.

Electronically generated test patterns, used for calibrating or troubleshooting the downstream signal path, were introduced in the late-1960s. These are generated by test signal generators, which do not depend on the correct configuration (and presence) of a camera, and can also test for additional parameters such as correct color decoding, sync, frames per second, and frequency response.[3] These patterns are specially tailored to be used in conjunction with devices such as a vectorscope, allowing precise adjustments of image equipment.

The audio broadcast while test cards are shown is typically a sine wave tone, radio (if associated or affiliated with the television channel) or music (usually instrumental, though some also broadcast with jazz or popular music).

Digitally generated cards came later, associated with digital television, and add a few features specific of digital signals, like checking for error correction, chroma subsampling, aspect ratio signaling, surround sound, etc. More recently, the use of test cards has also expanded beyond television to other digital displays such as large LED walls and video projectors.[3]

Technical details Edit

Test cards typically contain a set of patterns to enable television cameras and receivers to be adjusted to show the picture correctly (see SMPTE color bars). Most modern test cards include a set of calibrated color bars which will produce a characteristic pattern of "dot landings" on a vectorscope, allowing chroma and tint to be precisely adjusted between generations of videotape or network feeds. SMPTE bars—and several other test cards—include analog black (a flat waveform at 7.5 IRE, or the NTSC setup level), full white (100 IRE), and a "sub-black", or "blacker-than-black" (at 0 IRE), which represents the lowest low-frequency transmission voltage permissible in NTSC broadcasts (though the negative excursions of the colorburst signal may go below 0 IRE). Between the color bars and proper adjustment of brightness and contrast controls to the limits of perception of the first sub-black bar, an analog receiver (or other equipment such as VTRs) can be adjusted to provide impressive fidelity.

They are also used in the broader context of video displays for concerts and live events. There are a variety of different test patterns, each testing a specific technical parameter: gradient monotone bars for testing brightness and color; a crosshatch pattern for aspect ratio, alignment, focus, and convergence; and a single-pixel border for over-scanning and dimensions.[3]

History Edit

 
The famous RCA Indian-head test pattern used mainly in North America from 1940 to the 1970s with its elements labelled, describing the use of each element in aligning a black & white analog TV receiver.
 
First RTF test card (1953) for the 819-line tv system.
 
A 1952 Philips TD1410U television set showing the optical monochrome Telefunken T05 test card.

Test cards are as old as TV broadcasts, with documented use by the BBC in the United Kingdom in its early 30-line mechanical Baird transmissions from 1934[4] as well as in Occupied France during World War II.[5] They evolved to include gratings for resolution testing, grids to assist with picture geometry adjustments, and grayscale for brightness and contrast adjustments. For example, all these elements can be seen in a Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française 819-line test card introduced in 1953.[5]

In North America, most test cards such as the famous Indian-head test pattern of the 1950s and 1960s have long since been relegated to history. The SMPTE color bars occasionally turn up, but with most North American broadcasters now following a 24-hour schedule, these too have become a rare sight.

With the introduction of color TV, electronically generated test cards were introduced. They are named after their generating equipment (ex: Grundig VG1000,[6][7] Philips PM5544,[8] Telefunken FuBK,[9] etc.), TV station (ex: BBC test card) or organization (ex: SMPTE color bars, EBU colour bars).

In developed countries such as Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States, the financial imperatives of commercial television broadcasting mean that air-time is now typically filled with programmes and commercials (such as infomercials) 24 hours a day, and non-commercial broadcasters have to match this.

A late test card design, introduced in 2005 and fully adapted for HD, SD, 16:9 and 4:3 broadcasts, is defined on ITU-R Rec. BT.1729.[10] It offers markings specificity design to test format conversions, chroma sampling, etc.

Formerly a common sight, test cards are now only rarely seen outside of television studios, post-production, and distribution facilities. In particular, they are no longer intended to assist viewers in calibration of television sets. Several factors have led to their demise for this purpose:

  • Modern microcontroller-controlled analogue televisions rarely if ever need adjustment, so test cards are much less important than previously. Likewise, modern cameras and camcorders seldom need adjustment for technical accuracy, though they are often adjusted to compensate for scene light levels, and for various artistic effects.
  • Use of digital interconnect standards, such as CCIR 601 and SMPTE 292M, which operate without the non-linearities and other issues inherent to analog broadcasting, do not introduce color shifts or brightness changes; thus the requirement to detect and compensate for them using this reference signal has been virtually eliminated. (Compare with the obsolescence of stroboscopes as used to adjust the speed of record players.) On the other hand, digital test signal generators do include test signals which are intended to stress the digital interface, and many sophisticated generators allow the insertion of jitter, bit errors, and other pathological conditions that can cause a digital interface to fail.
  • Likewise, use of digital broadcasting standards, such as DVB and ATSC, eliminates the issues introduced by modulation and demodulation of analog signals.
  • Test cards including large circles were used to confirm the linearity of the set's deflection systems. As solid-state components replaced vacuum tubes in receiver deflection circuits, linearity adjustments were less frequently required (few newer sets have user-adjustable "VERT SIZE" and "VERT LIN" controls, for example). In LCD and other deflectionless displays, the linearity is a function of the display panel's manufacturing quality; for the display to work, the tolerances will already be far tighter than human perception.

For custom-designed video installations, such as LED displays in buildings or at live events, some test images are custom-made to fit the specific size and shape of the setup in question. These custom test images can also be an opportunity for the technicians to hide inside jokes for the crew to see while installing equipment for a show.[3]

Monoscope Edit

Rather than physical test cards, which had to be televised using a camera, television stations often used a special purpose camera tube which had the test pattern painted on the inside screen of the tube. Each tube was only capable of generating the one test image, hence it was called a monoscope.

Monoscopes were similar in construction to an ordinary cathode ray tube (CRT), only instead of displaying an image on its screen it scanned a built-in image. The monoscope contained a formed metal target in place of the phosphor coating at its "screen" end and as the electron beam scanned the target, rather than displaying an image, a varying electrical signal was produced generating a video signal from the etched pattern. Monoscope tubes had the advantage over test cards that a full TV camera was not needed, and the image was always properly framed and in focus. They fell out of use in the 1960s as they were not able to produce color images.

Other uses Edit

 
The test card bundled with the Links web browser since 2001

A lesser-known kind of test pattern is used for the calibration of photocopiers.[11][12] Photocopier test patterns are physical sheets that are photocopied, with the difference in the resulting photocopy revealing any telltale deviations or defects in the machine's ability to copy.

There are also test patterns kits and software developed specifically for many consumer electronics. The B&K Television Analyst was developed in the 1960s for testing monochrome TV sets in the NTSC standard and was later modified for European and Australian PAL standards. Among other uses, it consisted of a flying spot scanner on which a test pattern printed on a cellulose acetate slide was shown.[13]

When CRT monitors were still commonly used on personal computers, specific test patterns were created for proper calibration of such monitors in the cases whereby multimedia images could not be shown properly on said monitors.[14] Some VCD and DVD lens cleaner discs, such as the Kyowa Sonic lens cleaning kits from 1997–2001, also included test patterns as well.[15]

More recent examples include the THX Optimizer which can be accessed in the setup menu in almost every THX-certified DVD,[16][17] as well as well as the "HDR sRGB Graphics Test (400 nits)" and "Test Patterns" series available on Netflix[18] meant to test out streaming bandwidth on Internet-enabled devices,[19] especially on widescreen smart HDR TVs, 4K and 8K displays and also used to sync audio and video feeds, which can be affected, among other factors, by Bluetooth and Internet latency.[20]

Test patterns are also used to calibrate medical displays for telemedicine and medical diagnostic purposes, such as the SMPTE RP-133 medical diagnostic imaging test pattern specification for medical and surgical displays, created around 1983[21]–86;[22][23] as well as a later derivative called the TG18-QC test pattern created by the AAPM in 2001.[24][25] Test patterns to calibrate X-ray machines, in particular those manufactured by Leeds Test Objects in England, also exist as well.[26][27]

In numismatics Edit

Television has had such an impact in today's life that it has been the main motif for numerous collectors' coins and medals. One of the most recent examples is The 50 Years of Television commemorative coin minted on 9 March 2005, in Austria. The obverse of the coin shows the centre portion of the Telefunken T05 test card, while the reverse shows several milestones in the history of television.[28]

In popular culture Edit

The Philips Pattern is widely recognised as one of the iconic popular culture symbols of the 1980s and 1990s. Numerous novelty and collectible items has been patterned after the famous test card, including wall clocks, bedsheets, wristwatches, and clothing.

The BBC Test Card F features throughout 2006-07 TV sci-fi detective series Life on Mars.[29][30]

Test card music Edit

In Britain, music - rather than radio sound - was usually played with the test card. The music played by the BBC, and afterwards ITV, was library music, which was licensed on more favourable terms for frequent use than commercially available alternatives. Later, Channel 4 used UK library LPs from publishers like KPM, Joseph Weinberger and Ready Music.[31]

Until September 1955, the BBC used live playing 78 RPM commercial records as an audio background to the test cards. After that date, they switched to using recorded music on tape.[32] The following year, the BBC began to build up its own library of specially produced music for the half hour tapes - initially three tunes in similar style, followed by an identification sign (the three notes B-B-C played on celesta). ITV (which began its first trade transmissions in 1957) continued to use commercially available recordings until the late 1960s, when it also began to make specially produced tapes.[32]

For rights reasons, much of the music was recorded by light music orchestras in France and Germany, though sometimes by British musicians, or top international session players using pseudonyms, such as The Oscar Brandenburg Orchestra (an amalgamation of Neil Richardson, Alan Moorhouse and Johnny Pearson) or the Stuttgart Studio Orchestra.[33] Other composers and bandleaders commissioned for this type of work included Gordon Langford, Ernest Tomlinson. Roger Roger, Heinz Kiessling, Werner Tautz, Frank Chacksfield and Syd Dale.

During the 1980s, the test card was gradually seen less and less - it was pushed out first by Teletext pages, then extended programme hours. The same tapes were used to accompany both the test card and Ceefax on BBC channels, but some fans argue that new tapes introduced after Ceefax became the norm in 1983 were less musically interesting.[32]

List of TV test cards Edit

 
A newly built television set undergoing image calibration using a test card at a Grundig factory in Nuremburg, West Germany (December 1959)
 
A 1940s-style "bullseye" test pattern exhibited at the Early Television Museum in Hilliard, Ohio (June 2022)

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "TCC - A Very Concise History of Test Cards". www.testcardcircle.org.uk.
  2. ^ "TEST CARD | meaning in the Cambridge English Dictionary".
  3. ^ a b c d Claiborne, Vickie (9 November 2019). "Video Testing Images". PLSN. Retrieved 16 March 2020.
  4. ^ . Meldrum. 29 March 2000. Archived from the original on 23 February 2009. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
  5. ^ a b "Rétrospective : la mire à la télévision (1953 – 2002)". VivelaPub. January 5, 2012.
  6. ^ "Test signal generator".
  7. ^ "Grundig 72010-016.80 TV Service manual PDF View/Download, Page # 30". all-guidesbox.com.
  8. ^ "Combined colour/monochrome pattern generator PM 5544" (PDF).
  9. ^ Union, European Broadcasting (February 6, 1988). "EBU Review". Administrative Office of the European Broadcasting Union – via Google Books.
  10. ^ "ITU-R Rec. BT.1729" (PDF).
  11. ^ "Samsung SF531P PCSTATS Review – Printer Test Patterns". Pcstats.com. 2007-10-15. Retrieved 2010-01-01.
  12. ^ "Projection: Room A / Room B". Thing.net. Retrieved 2010-01-01.
  13. ^ "B&K 1076 Television Analyst".
  14. ^ "Monitor Settings Test". Underground History. 2003-05-16. Retrieved 2022-08-09.
  15. ^ "Lens Cleaner VCD". YouTube. 2021-02-27. Retrieved 2022-08-09.
  16. ^ "How to set-up your TV with the THX Optimizer disc | What Hi-Fi?". Whathifi.com. 19 September 2009. Retrieved 2022-08-09.
  17. ^ "THX Optimizer". AVForums. Retrieved 2022-08-09.
  18. ^ "The 10 Weirdest Things Hiding On Netflix | HuffPost Life". Huffpost.com. 19 June 2019. Retrieved 2022-08-09.
  19. ^ "Netflix Test Patterns". forum.xda-developers.com.[user-generated source]
  20. ^ "NETFLIX is offering Test Patterns to configure your HDR display!". avsforum.com.[user-generated source]
  21. ^ "IMAGE: SMTPE test pattern". Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers (SMPTE) – via David Clunie's Medical Image Format Site.
  22. ^ "SMPTE RP-133:1991 Specifications for Medical Diagnostic Imaging Test Pattern for Television Monitors | SMPTE".
  23. ^ Gray, J. E.; Lisk, K. G.; Anderson, W.; Harshbarger, J. H.; Schwenker, R.; Uzenoff, R. A. (1990). "Acceptance and Use of the SMPTE Medical Diagnostic Imaging Test Pattern for Television Monitors and Hard-Copy Recording Cameras". SMPTE Journal. 99 (12): 1001–1007. doi:10.5594/J02540.
  24. ^ Soh, Baolin Pauline; Lee, Warwick; Diffey, Jennifer L.; McEntee, Mark F.; Kench, Peter L.; Reed, Warren M.; Brennan, Patrick C. (2013). "Breast Screen New South Wales Generally Demonstrates Good Radiologic Viewing Conditions". Journal of Digital Imaging. 26 (4): 759–767. doi:10.1007/s10278-013-9571-1. PMC 3705022. PMID 23319112 – via ResearchGate.
  25. ^ Silosky, Michael S.; Marsh, Rebecca M.; Scherzinger, Ann L. (2016). "Imaging acquisition display performance: An evaluation and discussion of performance metrics and procedures". Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics. 17 (4): 334–341. doi:10.1120/jacmp.v17i4.6220. PMC 5690030. PMID 27455501.
  26. ^ "Resolution Test Patterns".
  27. ^ Costa, Milton Melciades Barbosa; Nova, João Luiz Leocadio da; Canevaro, Lucía Viviana (2009). "Efeito da filtração adicional nas doses de radiação e na qualidade das imagens nos exames videofluoroscópicos". Radiologia Brasileira. 42 (6): 379–387. doi:10.1590/S0100-39842009000600012.
  28. ^ . 2010-09-24. Archived from the original on 2010-09-24. Retrieved 2022-12-07.
  29. ^ "Life on Mars questions". BBC Drama. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  30. ^ Griffiths, Nick (1 April 2007). . The Radio Times. Archived from the original on 21 November 2008.
  31. ^ "Currie, Tony. 'The Girl, The Doll, The Music' (1998), essay included as the notes for Test Card Classics, Chandos CD FBCD 2000" (PDF).
  32. ^ a b c Roberts, Neville. A History of Test Card Music
  33. ^ "Royal Daffodil - Gordon Langford - Stuttgart Studio Orchestra/Ralph Elman - CBL 024" – via www.youtube.com.
  34. ^ "The Early History of Television Through Visual Images!".
  35. ^ "RCA'S FIRST ICONOSCOPE CAMERAS & THE PROTOTYPE".
  36. ^ "RCA's Television Field Trials".
  37. ^ "RCA / NBC test pattern #1 - Newly established 441-line system (up from the 343-lines of 1936)".
  38. ^ "TCNJ2 – An NBC test card in a monoscope (S.371) allowed stations to broadcast a test pattern without tying up another camera. From: "Item of the Week: Indian-Head Test Card | the Sarnoff Collection"".
  39. ^ "1938 December - RCA / NBC Test Pattern #2".
  40. ^ "Television Graphics Around the World". www.meldrum.co.uk.
  41. ^ "Test pattern? - Videokarma.org TV - Video - Vintage Television & Radio Forums". Videokarma.org. Retrieved 2022-07-24.
  42. ^ "EEV Test Chart for CCTV Cameras" (PDF). Electronics Australia (12): 57. 1970.
  43. ^ "ГОСТ 20466-75 - Таблица телевизионная испытательная универсальная ИТ-72. Диапозитивы. Общие технические условия". engenegr.ru.
  44. ^ "ГОСТ 28459-90 Таблица телевизионная испытательная универсальная 0286. Общие технические требования". allgosts.ru.
  45. ^ "DuMont Industrial Color System".
  46. ^ "DDR Fernsehen Normenumstellung von OIRT auf CCIR". www.radiomuseum.org. Retrieved 2022-12-31.
  47. ^ "DFF Electronic Test Pattern".
  48. ^ "DFF Monochrome Test Pattern".
  49. ^ "DFF Color Test Pattern".
  50. ^ Bowden-Smith, Kif. "Forward March". Transdiffusion.
  51. ^ "UK Broadcasting History". www.ambisonic.net.
  52. ^ Glick, Jerome. "Television & Video - Test Cards & Signals".
  53. ^ Test Charts (PDF). Marconi. 1960. p. 60.
  54. ^ Limited, Alamy. "broadcast, television, test pattern, Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk (Northwest German Broadcasting, NWDR), circa 1952 Stock Photo - Alamy". www.alamy.com. Retrieved 2022-12-31.
  55. ^ "Testbeelden van de Nederlandse Televisie".
  56. ^ . Meldrum. 29 March 2000. Archived from the original on 23 February 2009. Retrieved 14 August 2009.
  57. ^ Archives, RTÉ (July 5, 2012). "RTÉ Archives". stillslibrary.rte.ie.
  58. ^ "Philips PM 5534 Pal colour pattern generator" – via www.youtube.com.
  59. ^ "Sweden". March 16, 2015 – via Flickr.
  60. ^ a b "Philips TV-Measuring Equipment, 1980" (PDF).
  61. ^ "Philips PM5552 Test Pattern".
  62. ^ "Test pattern? - Page 4 - Videokarma.org TV - Video - Vintage Television & Radio Forums". Videokarma.org. 2021-11-17. Retrieved 2022-07-24.
  63. ^ "Hungarian ETC's". ing-sat.what.hu.
  64. ^ "Czechoslovakia". August 11, 2012 – via Flickr.
  65. ^ "CST EZO TEST PATTERN" – via www.youtube.com.
  66. ^ "MTN9 Griffith sign-off 1986". YouTube.
  67. ^ "KCTV screencap". January 17, 2016 – via Flickr.
  68. ^ "DPRK TV - Test Card" – via www.youtube.com.
  69. ^ SuperVisor Multi-Standard Display Processor Manual (PDF). Snell & Wilcox. 2001.
  70. ^ "The Snell & Wilcox Test Chart #2 What is it?".
  71. ^ . Cstandard.com. Archived from the original on 2022-09-25. Retrieved 2022-08-09.

External links Edit

  • The Test Card Circle, a UK fan site: details of the UK's Trade Test Transmissions including the history of the BBC and ITA Test Cards, a look at the music used and full details about the Trade Test Colour Films shown from the late fifties to 1973.
  • The Test Card Gallery
  • Nostalgia-TV: Television testikuva – test cards in Finland, in Finnish language only

test, card, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, cit. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Test card news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article has an unclear citation style The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message A test card also known as a test pattern or start up closedown test is a television test signal typically broadcast at times when the transmitter is active but no program is being broadcast often at sign on and sign off 1 SMPTE color bars common NTSC test patternPM5544 common PAL test patternEBU colour bars 4 3 Used since the earliest TV broadcasts test cards were originally physical cards at which a television camera was pointed allowing for simple adjustments of picture quality 2 Such cards are still often used for calibration alignment and matching of cameras and camcorders From the 1950s test card images were built into monoscope tubes which freed up the use of TV cameras which would otherwise have to be rotated to continuously broadcast physical test cards during downtime hours Electronically generated test patterns used for calibrating or troubleshooting the downstream signal path were introduced in the late 1960s These are generated by test signal generators which do not depend on the correct configuration and presence of a camera and can also test for additional parameters such as correct color decoding sync frames per second and frequency response 3 These patterns are specially tailored to be used in conjunction with devices such as a vectorscope allowing precise adjustments of image equipment The audio broadcast while test cards are shown is typically a sine wave tone radio if associated or affiliated with the television channel or music usually instrumental though some also broadcast with jazz or popular music Digitally generated cards came later associated with digital television and add a few features specific of digital signals like checking for error correction chroma subsampling aspect ratio signaling surround sound etc More recently the use of test cards has also expanded beyond television to other digital displays such as large LED walls and video projectors 3 Contents 1 Technical details 2 History 3 Monoscope 4 Other uses 5 In numismatics 6 In popular culture 7 Test card music 8 List of TV test cards 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksTechnical details EditTest cards typically contain a set of patterns to enable television cameras and receivers to be adjusted to show the picture correctly see SMPTE color bars Most modern test cards include a set of calibrated color bars which will produce a characteristic pattern of dot landings on a vectorscope allowing chroma and tint to be precisely adjusted between generations of videotape or network feeds SMPTE bars and several other test cards include analog black a flat waveform at 7 5 IRE or the NTSC setup level full white 100 IRE and a sub black or blacker than black at 0 IRE which represents the lowest low frequency transmission voltage permissible in NTSC broadcasts though the negative excursions of the colorburst signal may go below 0 IRE Between the color bars and proper adjustment of brightness and contrast controls to the limits of perception of the first sub black bar an analog receiver or other equipment such as VTRs can be adjusted to provide impressive fidelity They are also used in the broader context of video displays for concerts and live events There are a variety of different test patterns each testing a specific technical parameter gradient monotone bars for testing brightness and color a crosshatch pattern for aspect ratio alignment focus and convergence and a single pixel border for over scanning and dimensions 3 History Edit The famous RCA Indian head test pattern used mainly in North America from 1940 to the 1970s with its elements labelled describing the use of each element in aligning a black amp white analog TV receiver First RTF test card 1953 for the 819 line tv system A 1952 Philips TD1410U television set showing the optical monochrome Telefunken T05 test card Test cards are as old as TV broadcasts with documented use by the BBC in the United Kingdom in its early 30 line mechanical Baird transmissions from 1934 4 as well as in Occupied France during World War II 5 They evolved to include gratings for resolution testing grids to assist with picture geometry adjustments and grayscale for brightness and contrast adjustments For example all these elements can be seen in a Radiodiffusion Television Francaise 819 line test card introduced in 1953 5 In North America most test cards such as the famous Indian head test pattern of the 1950s and 1960s have long since been relegated to history The SMPTE color bars occasionally turn up but with most North American broadcasters now following a 24 hour schedule these too have become a rare sight With the introduction of color TV electronically generated test cards were introduced They are named after their generating equipment ex Grundig VG1000 6 7 Philips PM5544 8 Telefunken FuBK 9 etc TV station ex BBC test card or organization ex SMPTE color bars EBU colour bars In developed countries such as Australia Canada the United Kingdom and the United States the financial imperatives of commercial television broadcasting mean that air time is now typically filled with programmes and commercials such as infomercials 24 hours a day and non commercial broadcasters have to match this A late test card design introduced in 2005 and fully adapted for HD SD 16 9 and 4 3 broadcasts is defined on ITU R Rec BT 1729 10 It offers markings specificity design to test format conversions chroma sampling etc Formerly a common sight test cards are now only rarely seen outside of television studios post production and distribution facilities In particular they are no longer intended to assist viewers in calibration of television sets Several factors have led to their demise for this purpose Modern microcontroller controlled analogue televisions rarely if ever need adjustment so test cards are much less important than previously Likewise modern cameras and camcorders seldom need adjustment for technical accuracy though they are often adjusted to compensate for scene light levels and for various artistic effects Use of digital interconnect standards such as CCIR 601 and SMPTE 292M which operate without the non linearities and other issues inherent to analog broadcasting do not introduce color shifts or brightness changes thus the requirement to detect and compensate for them using this reference signal has been virtually eliminated Compare with the obsolescence of stroboscopes as used to adjust the speed of record players On the other hand digital test signal generators do include test signals which are intended to stress the digital interface and many sophisticated generators allow the insertion of jitter bit errors and other pathological conditions that can cause a digital interface to fail Likewise use of digital broadcasting standards such as DVB and ATSC eliminates the issues introduced by modulation and demodulation of analog signals Test cards including large circles were used to confirm the linearity of the set s deflection systems As solid state components replaced vacuum tubes in receiver deflection circuits linearity adjustments were less frequently required few newer sets have user adjustable VERT SIZE and VERT LIN controls for example In LCD and other deflectionless displays the linearity is a function of the display panel s manufacturing quality for the display to work the tolerances will already be far tighter than human perception For custom designed video installations such as LED displays in buildings or at live events some test images are custom made to fit the specific size and shape of the setup in question These custom test images can also be an opportunity for the technicians to hide inside jokes for the crew to see while installing equipment for a show 3 Monoscope EditMain article Monoscope Rather than physical test cards which had to be televised using a camera television stations often used a special purpose camera tube which had the test pattern painted on the inside screen of the tube Each tube was only capable of generating the one test image hence it was called a monoscope Monoscopes were similar in construction to an ordinary cathode ray tube CRT only instead of displaying an image on its screen it scanned a built in image The monoscope contained a formed metal target in place of the phosphor coating at its screen end and as the electron beam scanned the target rather than displaying an image a varying electrical signal was produced generating a video signal from the etched pattern Monoscope tubes had the advantage over test cards that a full TV camera was not needed and the image was always properly framed and in focus They fell out of use in the 1960s as they were not able to produce color images A monoscope Close up of the test card image from a monoscopeOther uses Edit The test card bundled with the Links web browser since 2001A lesser known kind of test pattern is used for the calibration of photocopiers 11 12 Photocopier test patterns are physical sheets that are photocopied with the difference in the resulting photocopy revealing any telltale deviations or defects in the machine s ability to copy There are also test patterns kits and software developed specifically for many consumer electronics The B amp K Television Analyst was developed in the 1960s for testing monochrome TV sets in the NTSC standard and was later modified for European and Australian PAL standards Among other uses it consisted of a flying spot scanner on which a test pattern printed on a cellulose acetate slide was shown 13 When CRT monitors were still commonly used on personal computers specific test patterns were created for proper calibration of such monitors in the cases whereby multimedia images could not be shown properly on said monitors 14 Some VCD and DVD lens cleaner discs such as the Kyowa Sonic lens cleaning kits from 1997 2001 also included test patterns as well 15 More recent examples include the THX Optimizer which can be accessed in the setup menu in almost every THX certified DVD 16 17 as well as well as the HDR sRGB Graphics Test 400 nits and Test Patterns series available on Netflix 18 meant to test out streaming bandwidth on Internet enabled devices 19 especially on widescreen smart HDR TVs 4K and 8K displays and also used to sync audio and video feeds which can be affected among other factors by Bluetooth and Internet latency 20 Test patterns are also used to calibrate medical displays for telemedicine and medical diagnostic purposes such as the SMPTE RP 133 medical diagnostic imaging test pattern specification for medical and surgical displays created around 1983 21 86 22 23 as well as a later derivative called the TG18 QC test pattern created by the AAPM in 2001 24 25 Test patterns to calibrate X ray machines in particular those manufactured by Leeds Test Objects in England also exist as well 26 27 In numismatics EditTelevision has had such an impact in today s life that it has been the main motif for numerous collectors coins and medals One of the most recent examples is The 50 Years of Television commemorative coin minted on 9 March 2005 in Austria The obverse of the coin shows the centre portion of the Telefunken T05 test card while the reverse shows several milestones in the history of television 28 In popular culture EditThe Philips Pattern is widely recognised as one of the iconic popular culture symbols of the 1980s and 1990s Numerous novelty and collectible items has been patterned after the famous test card including wall clocks bedsheets wristwatches and clothing The BBC Test Card F features throughout 2006 07 TV sci fi detective series Life on Mars 29 30 Test card music EditIn Britain music rather than radio sound was usually played with the test card The music played by the BBC and afterwards ITV was library music which was licensed on more favourable terms for frequent use than commercially available alternatives Later Channel 4 used UK library LPs from publishers like KPM Joseph Weinberger and Ready Music 31 Until September 1955 the BBC used live playing 78 RPM commercial records as an audio background to the test cards After that date they switched to using recorded music on tape 32 The following year the BBC began to build up its own library of specially produced music for the half hour tapes initially three tunes in similar style followed by an identification sign the three notes B B C played on celesta ITV which began its first trade transmissions in 1957 continued to use commercially available recordings until the late 1960s when it also began to make specially produced tapes 32 For rights reasons much of the music was recorded by light music orchestras in France and Germany though sometimes by British musicians or top international session players using pseudonyms such as The Oscar Brandenburg Orchestra an amalgamation of Neil Richardson Alan Moorhouse and Johnny Pearson or the Stuttgart Studio Orchestra 33 Other composers and bandleaders commissioned for this type of work included Gordon Langford Ernest Tomlinson Roger Roger Heinz Kiessling Werner Tautz Frank Chacksfield and Syd Dale During the 1980s the test card was gradually seen less and less it was pushed out first by Teletext pages then extended programme hours The same tapes were used to accompany both the test card and Ceefax on BBC channels but some fans argue that new tapes introduced after Ceefax became the norm in 1983 were less musically interesting 32 List of TV test cards Edit A newly built television set undergoing image calibration using a test card at a Grundig factory in Nuremburg West Germany December 1959 A 1940s style bullseye test pattern exhibited at the Early Television Museum in Hilliard Ohio June 2022 BBC Tuning Signals and Test Cards A B C D E F G H J W X 1934 2006 Mechanical 30 and 240 lines Monochrome PAL SDTV HDTV 405 and 625 lines RCA Victor monochrome test pattern with RCA logos and Nipper the dog illustrations at corners c 1933 34 34 35 1937 36 343 lines RCA NBC monochrome test patterns 1 and 2 1938 37 39 38 39 441 lines RCA Indian head test pattern 1939 525 lines ABC CBS Crosley Avco DuMont NBC monochrome bullseye test patterns c 1939 47 40 525 lines 41 RMA 1946 resolution chart 1946 525 and 625 lines Marconi Resolution Chart No 1 English Electric Valve Company Test Chart 42 c 1947 c 1970 525 and 625 lines TIT 0249 IT 72 43 and tablica 0286 44 monochrome test cards 1949 c 1975 78 c 1990 92 used in Soviet Union and Russia DuMont Industrial Color Television test pattern 1950 experimentally shown on KE2XDR 45 DFF Deutscher Fernsehfunk monochrome Q1 QI1 46 Test nr 04 modified EBU monochrome and colour modified HTV TR 0782 test patterns 1952 1991 SECAM used in East Germany 47 48 49 Radiodiffusion Television Francaise Marly Horses test card 1953 819 lines TIT 0154 colour test card 1954 abandoned prototype Soviet Union NIIR SECAM IV system Associated Rediffusion Marconi diamond monochrome test card versions 1 2 and 3 50 51 52 1955 1958 625 lines Version 1 also used by RTV in British Hong Kong TVM in Crown Colony of Malta and WNTV in the western part of Colonial Nigeria 53 EIA 1956 resolution chart 1956 525 and 625 lines Chequerboard optical 54 and electronic tea towel 55 test cards 1950s 60s monochrome 625 lines used in varying forms in West Germany Italy Netherlands Soviet Union Portugal and Spain SMPTE optical monochrome test card 1950s 525 lines 1962 1964 56 625 lines 57 Philips PM 5534 58 59 PM 5538 PM 5540 60 PM 5543 PM 5544 PM 5552 61 60 PM 5634 PM 5644 1960s 525 and 625 lines PAL PALplus SECAM NTSC Telefunken T 05 early 1960s 625 lines EBU electronic monochrome test pattern 1960s 625 lines CBS NBC color bullseye test patterns c 1964 65 early 1990s NTSC 62 Telefunken FuBK late 1960s PAL UEIT Universal Electronic Test Chart 1970 SECAM HTV TR 0782 test card 1970s SECAM used in Hungary Poland East Germany and Romania 63 EZO test card 1971 PAL used in Czechoslovakia 64 65 BNT electronic test card 1972 SECAM used in Bulgaria TVE colour test card 1975 PAL SMPTE color bars 1977 NTSC HDTV SDTV EBU colour bars Electronic Test Pattern 1 1979 PAL Grundig VG 1001 1980 PAL Toolcraft Goodwood colour test card c 1980s 2000s PAL used on various Australian commercial TV stations 66 KCTV colour test cards 1970s mid 1990s 2017 SECAM then PAL used in North Korea 67 68 Snell amp Wilcox SW2 1990s TPG20 21 Test Pattern Generators and SW4 Zone Plate 2000s NTSC PAL SDTV 69 70 GY T 254 2011 test card 2011 HDTV DTMB used in Mainland China 71 See also Edit Television portal Wikimedia Commons has media related to Television test patterns Blue only mode Colour chart List of BBC test cards Test Card F Webdriver Torso YouTube account used for automated performance testingReferences Edit TCC A Very Concise History of Test Cards www testcardcircle org uk TEST CARD meaning in the Cambridge English Dictionary a b c d Claiborne Vickie 9 November 2019 Video Testing Images PLSN Retrieved 16 March 2020 BBC Tuning Signals Meldrum 29 March 2000 Archived from the original on 23 February 2009 Retrieved 13 February 2022 a b Retrospective la mire a la television 1953 2002 VivelaPub January 5 2012 Test signal generator Grundig 72010 016 80 TV Service manual PDF View Download Page 30 all guidesbox com Combined colour monochrome pattern generator PM 5544 PDF Union European Broadcasting February 6 1988 EBU Review Administrative Office of the European Broadcasting Union via Google Books ITU R Rec BT 1729 PDF Samsung SF531P PCSTATS Review Printer Test Patterns Pcstats com 2007 10 15 Retrieved 2010 01 01 Projection Room A Room B Thing net Retrieved 2010 01 01 B amp K 1076 Television Analyst Monitor Settings Test Underground History 2003 05 16 Retrieved 2022 08 09 Lens Cleaner VCD YouTube 2021 02 27 Retrieved 2022 08 09 How to set up your TV with the THX Optimizer disc What Hi Fi Whathifi com 19 September 2009 Retrieved 2022 08 09 THX Optimizer AVForums Retrieved 2022 08 09 The 10 Weirdest Things Hiding On Netflix HuffPost Life Huffpost com 19 June 2019 Retrieved 2022 08 09 Netflix Test Patterns forum xda developers com user generated source NETFLIX is offering Test Patterns to configure your HDR display avsforum com user generated source IMAGE SMTPE test pattern Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers SMPTE via David Clunie s Medical Image Format Site SMPTE RP 133 1991 Specifications for Medical Diagnostic Imaging Test Pattern for Television Monitors SMPTE Gray J E Lisk K G Anderson W Harshbarger J H Schwenker R Uzenoff R A 1990 Acceptance and Use of the SMPTE Medical Diagnostic Imaging Test Pattern for Television Monitors and Hard Copy Recording Cameras SMPTE Journal 99 12 1001 1007 doi 10 5594 J02540 Soh Baolin Pauline Lee Warwick Diffey Jennifer L McEntee Mark F Kench Peter L Reed Warren M Brennan Patrick C 2013 Breast Screen New South Wales Generally Demonstrates Good Radiologic Viewing Conditions Journal of Digital Imaging 26 4 759 767 doi 10 1007 s10278 013 9571 1 PMC 3705022 PMID 23319112 via ResearchGate Silosky Michael S Marsh Rebecca M Scherzinger Ann L 2016 Imaging acquisition display performance An evaluation and discussion of performance metrics and procedures Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics 17 4 334 341 doi 10 1120 jacmp v17i4 6220 PMC 5690030 PMID 27455501 Resolution Test Patterns Costa Milton Melciades Barbosa Nova Joao Luiz Leocadio da Canevaro Lucia Viviana 2009 Efeito da filtracao adicional nas doses de radiacao e na qualidade das imagens nos exames videofluoroscopicos Radiologia Brasileira 42 6 379 387 doi 10 1590 S0100 39842009000600012 Austrian Mint Bimetal Coins 2010 09 24 Archived from the original on 2010 09 24 Retrieved 2022 12 07 Life on Mars questions BBC Drama Retrieved 24 July 2020 Griffiths Nick 1 April 2007 Did you spot the clues The Radio Times Archived from the original on 21 November 2008 Currie Tony The Girl The Doll The Music 1998 essay included as the notes for Test Card Classics Chandos CD FBCD 2000 PDF a b c Roberts Neville A History of Test Card Music Royal Daffodil Gordon Langford Stuttgart Studio Orchestra Ralph Elman CBL 024 via www youtube com The Early History of Television Through Visual Images RCA S FIRST ICONOSCOPE CAMERAS amp THE PROTOTYPE RCA s Television Field Trials RCA NBC test pattern 1 Newly established 441 line system up from the 343 lines of 1936 TCNJ2 An NBC test card in a monoscope S 371 allowed stations to broadcast a test pattern without tying up another camera From Item of the Week Indian Head Test Card the Sarnoff Collection 1938 December RCA NBC Test Pattern 2 Television Graphics Around the World www meldrum co uk Test pattern Videokarma org TV Video Vintage Television amp Radio Forums Videokarma org Retrieved 2022 07 24 EEV Test Chart for CCTV Cameras PDF Electronics Australia 12 57 1970 GOST 20466 75 Tablica televizionnaya ispytatelnaya universalnaya IT 72 Diapozitivy Obshie tehnicheskie usloviya engenegr ru GOST 28459 90 Tablica televizionnaya ispytatelnaya universalnaya 0286 Obshie tehnicheskie trebovaniya allgosts ru DuMont Industrial Color System DDR Fernsehen Normenumstellung von OIRT auf CCIR www radiomuseum org Retrieved 2022 12 31 DFF Electronic Test Pattern DFF Monochrome Test Pattern DFF Color Test Pattern Bowden Smith Kif Forward March Transdiffusion UK Broadcasting History www ambisonic net Glick Jerome Television amp Video Test Cards amp Signals Test Charts PDF Marconi 1960 p 60 Limited Alamy broadcast television test pattern Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk Northwest German Broadcasting NWDR circa 1952 Stock Photo Alamy www alamy com Retrieved 2022 12 31 Testbeelden van de Nederlandse Televisie BBC Tuning Signals Meldrum 29 March 2000 Archived from the original on 23 February 2009 Retrieved 14 August 2009 Archives RTE July 5 2012 RTE Archives stillslibrary rte ie Philips PM 5534 Pal colour pattern generator via www youtube com Sweden March 16 2015 via Flickr a b Philips TV Measuring Equipment 1980 PDF Philips PM5552 Test Pattern Test pattern Page 4 Videokarma org TV Video Vintage Television amp Radio Forums Videokarma org 2021 11 17 Retrieved 2022 07 24 Hungarian ETC s ing sat what hu Czechoslovakia August 11 2012 via Flickr CST EZO TEST PATTERN via www youtube com MTN9 Griffith sign off 1986 YouTube KCTV screencap January 17 2016 via Flickr DPRK TV Test Card via www youtube com SuperVisor Multi Standard Display Processor Manual PDF Snell amp Wilcox 2001 The Snell amp Wilcox Test Chart 2 What is it GY T 254 2011 高清晰度电视测试图 标准网 Cstandard com Archived from the original on 2022 09 25 Retrieved 2022 08 09 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Television test patterns The Test Card Circle a UK fan site details of the UK s Trade Test Transmissions including the history of the BBC and ITA Test Cards a look at the music used and full details about the Trade Test Colour Films shown from the late fifties to 1973 The Test Card Gallery Nostalgia TV Television testikuva test cards in Finland in Finnish language only Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Test card amp oldid 1171394471, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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