Playing back Region 1 DVDs
Franglais
Posts: 3,312
Forum Member
✭✭✭
If you have a DVD player which is able to playback Region 1 discs from the USA, would the TV also need to be able to display the NTSC colour or is that resolved within the player itself?
0
Comments
it's not normally resolved within the player. it will usually output an ntsc signal.
but if your tv is newer than about 20 years old it wont have a problem with this.
strictly speaking, the answer to the first question is no, and the answer to the second question is sometimes
some players can output NTSC as PAL or as PAL60, thus if you had a tv that can't play NTSC then you can output on certail players as PAL
in practice most tv's will be able to play both PAL and NTSC as they are usually made in the same factories in china that supply a world market, so most components are made for both PAL and NTSC
if you google up your make and model numbers of the hardware you have you should be able to find the specds and find out what they can do. there are probably very few sets in the UK that won't play NTSC. pretty much all plasma/lcd tv's should do this no problem
i would be amazed if that didn't play ntsc.
i don't think there are any HD TVs that can't handle both formats.
Although the different frame rates between NTSC and PAL might be. Though perhaps not so much with modern kit.
no it doesn't. pal is 50hz and ntsc is 60hz. some tv's will take ntsc through one of two scart sockets but only play back in b/w through the other for example
B&O sets in particular can have issues playing NTSC discs and not be region free. but you have to pay a lot of money for that privelidge
a google of that model finds an cnet review that netions ntsc tuner so you should be fine
Not specifically so - neither PAL nor NTSC specify frame (or line rates) - 'generally' though NTSC is commonly used for 525/60 and PAL for 625/50. But this isn't exclusive, and there have been numerous DVD players (for example) which will output 625/50 NTSC.
There's rarely now an issue with refresh rates either. Decent TVs from the mid-90's on have been able to cope with 50~60Hz refresh rates. There's quite a few console games that play in something other than vanilla 50Hz.
and blurays.
in fact the R2 DVD release of Archer is NTSC
all of them? what nonsense
and if a tv has an ntsc tuner then it will usually mean it can play ntsc material
and brazil is the only countril that has PAL at 60hz. what's the chances of the OP having a brazilian setup in the UK
talk about over complicating a simple question for someone that wants help. the simple answer is it's likely to work
NTSC playback is part of the R2 standards, so a UK R2 based played (which could also be multiregion) has to be able to play NTSC. there are a number of ntsc R2 discs of tv sourced material and music videos
^ this post is proof you are talking nonsense
absolute nonsense. i don't know why people bother posting such rubbish in response to someones request for help, as that certainly doesn't help anyone does it? how does that post help the OP in the slightest? not one bit
as has been said your info is of no use to the OP. and pretty much all north american tvs play pal these days. but that is not what the OP is asking anyway.
I wondered that too and here's the answer
http://www.220-electronics.com/tv/lcd.htm#40-42 Multi System LCD TVs
it's not "an option that became available", it's more an option that available in some, perhaps most models, but not in others. i've bought a dvd player in the states and plugged it into an american model CRT that must have been made about 20 years ago from now, and it worked. i've never found a machine in the states that i've had my hands on that didn't play R2 discs and none of my friends in the states that have been given R2 discs have had any problems in playing them. most electronic hardware of that nature is made in china using the same components for the world market as it's cheaper to produce large runs of the same item than change for different markets
scart isn't a common socket in the states as it was a european design, sometimes refered to as euroscart. with freeview mostly coming with scart only outputs then it's no surprise they won't work. even freeview boxes with RF output would have problems as models are more likely to have an NTSC tuner looking for a 60hz signal instead of a PAL tuner that can accept the 50hz RF signal. thus unless you used the composite or svhs/rgb sockets and the set could accept 50hz from those sockets, you would have problems unless the set had hmdi, which older sets may not have