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CCIR System M

CCIR System M,[1][2][3] sometimes called 525–line, monochrome NTSC, NTSC-M, or CCIR-M,[4][5] is the analog broadcast television system approved by the FCC (upon recommendation by the National Television Systems Committee - NTSC)[6] for use in the United States since July 1, 1941,[7][8] replacing the 441-line TV system introduced in 1938.[8] System M comprises a total of 525 interlaced lines of video, of which 486 contain the image information, at 30 frames per second. Video is amplitude modulated and audio is frequency modulated, with a total bandwidth of 6 MHz for each channel, including a guard band.[9]

It was also adopted in the Americas and Caribbean; Myanmar, Philippines, South Korea, Taiwan and Japan (here with minor differences, informally referred to as System J). System M doesn't specify a color system, but NTSC (NTSC-M) was normally used, with some exceptions: NTSC-J in Japan, PAL-M in Brazil and SECAM-M in Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam (see Color standards section below).


The letter M designation was attributed by the ITU at the 1961 Stockholm meeting (see ITU identification scheme).[10]


In 1965, Thailand decided to replace System M with 625-line CCIR System B, which started in 1967, adopting PAL at the same time.[11]


Since 2015, System M is being replaced by digital broadcasting, in countries such as the Americas, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and the Philippines.

: 525

Lines (total)

: 486

Lines (visible)

: 29.97 Hz (NTSC color), 30 Hz (monochrome and PAL-M color)

Frame rate

: 6 MHz

Channel bandwidth

: 4.2 MHz

Visual bandwidth

Sound offset: +4.5 MHz

: 0.75 MHz

Vestigial sideband

Vision modulation: Negative

Preemphasis: 75 μs

Sound modulation:

FM

Color standards: , NTSC-J, PAL-M, SECAM-M, Clear-Vision, B-MAC

NTSC-M

Some of the important specifications for System M are listed below:[12]

— dominant color system used with System M, so much so that System M is often referred to as "NTSC". Much of the information in the NTSC article is actually about System M.

NTSC

— explains other types of television system standards

Broadcast television systems

— usual method for adding stereo to System M and System N audio carriers

Multichannel Television Sound

Pan-American television frequencies