HDCAM – High Definition Digital Recording
Since Sony introduced the HDCAM format in 1997, it
has been well proven in the USA and Japan, where it
has offered highly mobile and compact 1080/60i
digital acquisition and recording solutions. This highly
reliable and robust format delivers superb picture
quality efficiently packaged onto 1/2-inch tape. The
data rate is such that, compared to other systems, the
tape recordings are inherently more robust and the
running costs are lower due to lower tape consumption
and reduced maintenance requirements. The data rate
also makes possible portable, battery-powered
products such as the HDW-F900 camcorder. Also the
HDCAM signal (HD SDTI) can be routed through
conventional SDI routers and infrastructure. Current
computer graphic workstations can access the HD
signal through their current SDI I/O.
The HDW-F500 VTR acquires each picture frame
according to the industry standard Common Image
Format (CIF) which specifies a sampling structure of
1920 active pixels horizontally by 1080 pixels
vertically.
The state-of-the-art Sony HDCAM compression scheme
is a frame-based digital compression strategy, where
every frame of the signal is treated as a single entity.
By this HDCAM maintains exceptionally high picture
quality and multi-generation robustness for both
progressive and interlace signals.
Advanced digital pre-filtering and dynamic
bit-allocation for luminance and chrominance
components (based on the statistical analysis of the
picture content) are combined with a low compression
ratio of 4.4 to 1 to give a total on-tape recorded data
rate of a modest 185 Mb/s at 60i. On tape the
recordings are protected by very powerful error
correction and concealment strategies perfected
through years of Sony digital VTR development.
The on-tape recording footprint remains the same for
all frame rates. The different rates are accommodated
by changing drum rotation speed and linear tape
speed. What this means is that a recording made at
one frame rate can easily be replayed at another frame
rate with no quality loss. A 24P recording made to
support movie production can be replayed at the
slightly higher 25P and 30P frame rate for television
broadcasting. A common practice made simple by the
HDW-F500. In this case the HDW-F500 will also
convert audio and time code for correct 25P or 30P
replay.
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