Time code

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Revision as of 12:36, 7 February 2007 by imported>William Meyer (Television Time Code)
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In the mid-1950's, the first practical videotape recorders were introduced. This shortly gave rise to the need for editing content, but the nature of those machines was such that if tape movement were stopped, a picture was not and could not be displayed. This led to the invention of a time code address that was recorded on the second audio track of the tape. Times were of the form: hh:mm:ss:ff, where hh means hours, mm means minutes, ss means seconds, and ff means frames. In the days of monochrome television, there were 30 frames per second; color television in the United States modified this to 29.97 frames per second (fps). Correction of the resulting error with respect to real time was accomplished through the addition of a format called drop-frame, in which two frame addresses were omitted at the first frame of the first second of each minute not evenly divisible by 10.