Control track longitudinal timecode: Difference between revisions

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Control Track Pulse: Most are familiar with the digital "counters" on VHS recorders and camcorders, viewed via the onscreen display (OSD) and/or a decicateddedicated LED display. These numbers are sometimes in real time format (hours : minutes : seconds), but are often only an ambiguous 4 digit sequential counter. These numbers advance up or down based on the machine counting a tape's control track pulses. This type of display is useful only as a simple and temporary reference, as it is very inaccurate, and the counter is reset to zero when a tape is inserted. A basic 4 digit counter is almost completely worthless, as their rate of advance was never standardized by manufacturers.
 
 
Conversely, CTL timecode is an ''absolute'' timecode with specific digital references for every frame of video. Thus, a tape with CTL timecode can always display current timecode position accurately, even if the tape is moved from one machine to another. CTL timecode embedding can be transferred when making a copy, as long as the recording machine supports CTL timecode. Because CTL timecode ''is'' SMPTE timecode, its timecode can be interchanged with other SMPTE timecode schemes, like VITC and linear (audio track) timecode, as well as SMPTE timecode devices like timecode readers, generators, window dub inserters, and edit controllers.