Dennis Davidoff
April 11th, 2005, 02:14 PM
Recently I came across a curious info regarding different compressions in XL2. It seems that XL2 NTSC uses 4:1:1 compression, while PAL version uses 4:2:0.
So, what does that mean for the visible picture quality and how different is it, really? Which is "better"?
Thanks
Joshua Provost
April 11th, 2005, 02:47 PM
Dennis,
Both formats are storing the same amount of color data (1/4 the luma data). However, the store it in differents shapes, if you will. 4:1:1 in long, rectangular blocks, 1x4 pixels. 4:2:0 on square blocks, 2x2 pixels. The same amount of data, in a different configuration.
I don't think that one is necessarily better than the other. However, you must realize that they will result in different types of artifacts. Banding artifacts versus block artifacts.
Now, I have a theory about 4:1:1 being a better format for interlaced video, because for any motion where there will be interlace combing, 4:1:1 is accurate (as it can be) for each line. 4:2:0 encoding of interlace coding could end up being highly inaccurate.
For progressive video, 4:2:0 is likely better, as it distributes it's artifacts equally horizontally and vertically.
With that in mind, XL2 PAL 25p would seem to be a great format for eventual film transfer.
Josh