Question:
NTSC and PAL television......CONFUSED !!!?
Laeeq Rahman
2011-10-09 21:17:48 UTC
i am planning to buy lg lw6500 3d tv from US and take it to india
but only thing i am confused is about ntsc and pal
i checked that it has voltage rating 110 v to 220 v so voltage is not an issue
but i want to know the issues related to ntsc and pal
i mean what will happen if i use ntsc television in pal region ???
Five answers:
?
2011-10-10 11:48:44 UTC
US sets dont commonly have a PAL mode . Wheras an Indian or European set will likely have an NTSC mode.

Therefore i would not take a US set to india unless it can definitly work on PAL B . India uses Pal mode B like Europe and Australia. Wheras UK and ireland use PAL I and eastern europe other versions of PAL.
GibsonEssGee
2011-10-10 02:51:34 UTC
If you use either a digital terrestrial receiver or a satellite receiver with an HDMI output to the TV then NTSC/PAL isn't an issue. Forget about analogue TV unless there's an option for PAL B in the analogue installation menu.
David W
2011-10-09 21:19:17 UTC
You'll get pretty much garbage on the screen...if the TV isn't compatible with a PAL signal, it won't work in India. It's not a voltage issue, it's the format the actual video signal is sent in.
no
2011-10-09 21:21:32 UTC
pal runs at 50hz and NTSC at 60hz so you may get some frame rate issues also I think the colouing will be bad. most tvs nowadays have a pal/NTSC mode (at least my pannasonic does) so hopefully yours will too
anonymous
2016-11-12 10:15:47 UTC
the three considerable adjustments are in (the two first have been suggested earlier) - the size of the physique, chum being larger in usual definition . btw an identical dimensions, like 1280x720 and 1920x1080, are used in HD for the two format . - the form of frames according to seconds. 25 or 30 - the way the colour are coded. pertaining to to the preliminary question: "what's meant via chum/NTSC?". It relies upon of the context. in case you have been conversing a pair of television which shield "chum/NTSC", it skill it may shield the two indicators.


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