Genlock, Timecode, Wordclock -- What Are They? Do I Need Them? Are They Interchangeable?

  Рет қаралды 29,133

Doug Johnson Productions

Doug Johnson Productions

Күн бұрын

If you've ever been confused by genlock, timecode, or wordclock, this video is for you. I talk about what all three of them are, how they're used, and why you should use them.
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00:00 Introduction
00:54 Genlock
18:46 Timecode
26:52 Timecode caveats
33:41 Wordclock
36:44 How are they related?
37:47 Outro

Пікірлер: 153
@IndyJaner
@IndyJaner 3 жыл бұрын
Hey Doug! Just wanted to say that your videos are very valuable. There’s no need to excuse yourself for minor issues most of us wouldn’t have noticed anyway. Thanks for your work!
@duplimarkcorporation9075
@duplimarkcorporation9075 3 жыл бұрын
Your audio was just fine... especially compared to some of the other KZbinrs who think standing 20 feet in front of their phone will work. But the info in this video was REALLY helpful. I haven't ever used genlock or timecode, but I can see how this would be beneficial in certain situations.
@letmelooktv
@letmelooktv 3 жыл бұрын
My first job around 85 was a tape op/runner in a post production facility. So at 16 i was looking at vector scopes spooling up 1inch tape machines learning about black and burst front porch back porch etc. Playing with multi machine edit suits and beta decks i think they were around then. I learnt so much at that place. It set me on a path for life. Edit: when you were allowed one of those little yellow tweaker sticks to adjust machines... a proud moment lol.
@JohnnyMotel99
@JohnnyMotel99 Жыл бұрын
"Edit: when you were allowed one of those little yellow tweaker sticks to adjust machines... a proud moment lol." ah yes thos little tweak sticks...always getting lost! I started a few years later than you and ended up working for a subsidiary of major broadcaster. I also got to learn colour grading.
@tylerkeeton17
@tylerkeeton17 2 жыл бұрын
great video as always! Thanks for all the time you put into these!
@scottjarriel6761
@scottjarriel6761 2 жыл бұрын
Phenomenal explanations of signal sync. Thanks Doug!
@fredyoredo
@fredyoredo 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you DJP my problem is solved, THANK YOU VERY MUCH!!
@krismatthew7502
@krismatthew7502 2 жыл бұрын
Great Video Doug! Helped me understand Genlock much better.
@tommoffitt4813
@tommoffitt4813 21 күн бұрын
Incredible videos my man. I've learned so much from this channel, truly invaluable.
@mammitnaamalle4603
@mammitnaamalle4603 Жыл бұрын
Great precise presentation. Seeing the actual sync signals helps a lot to understand what is going on. Thanks!
@lincolnkarim1
@lincolnkarim1 Жыл бұрын
Great job in your explanation. Notice 26:03 that in Drop Frame TC the last colon turns onto a semi-colon to indicate DF. You may want to know that in the early days TV Broadcasting, certain high-end equipment needed several synchronizing signals, not just Black Burst. Switchers like Grass Valley and large Studio cameras needed Burst Flag, Burst Gate, Horiz sync, vert sync to name a few. Another note, is that Video Tape and Video cassette machines could not be gen-locked because of unpredictable rotations of their head drum. A Timebase Corrector was necessary to store at least one line of video coming off the drum and output the buffered line in sync with an ext ref. TBCs eventually advanced to having more than one line of memory, until they were able to have a several hundred lines of memory (a frame's worth), which was then called a frame sync. It's refreshing to see a relatively young person like yourself who understands legacy technology.
@djp_video
@djp_video Жыл бұрын
I'm not quite as young as I look ;) I've owned and used time base correctors, frame syncs, and color correctors myself. It wasn't that many years ago that I got rid of the last of them.
@zebrazone
@zebrazone 2 жыл бұрын
Such a great video full of valuable knowledge, thanks for taking the time to make it! Learned a lot on this obscure albeit important subject. And it’s usually quite tough to record late in the night.
@violentpixelation5486
@violentpixelation5486 2 ай бұрын
Tremendous explanation. Thank you.
@edjefferson9175
@edjefferson9175 2 жыл бұрын
It's not the mic - it's where you put it. Your audio is perfectly acceptable! Thank you for the information! It's not all that complicated but needs to be understood and if used incorrectly can cause serious problems.
@doctorscongregation
@doctorscongregation 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks, a super useful explanation. I liked the oscilloscope approach.
@ChaoteLab
@ChaoteLab Жыл бұрын
Well done! Extremely helpful.
@deusexmachina3496
@deusexmachina3496 8 ай бұрын
awesome explanation, started working as an hardware testing person in broadcasting industry and have been a bit lost by so many terms, this is definitely helpful
@frubo_ssg
@frubo_ssg Жыл бұрын
Great and valuable information. Thanks a lot! Just an additional info: Tentacles offers a variety of cable adapters (like BNC,…) for different devices.
@stephenbingen6191
@stephenbingen6191 Жыл бұрын
Timecode to dante .... GENIUS!!!
@HackingHollywood
@HackingHollywood 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for all the great info. I’ve seen sound guys “jam” timecode several times on sets over the years, and I remember the early days with gen lock (though I never had to do it myself). Then over time it became less relevant but like you mentioned still worth knowing!
@bcalenda2609
@bcalenda2609 2 жыл бұрын
Most sound guys now timecode boxes like Tentacle Sync. If you roll for 2 hours no cuts like a concert or live event or documentary intv then Genlock keeps cameras rock solid sync no drift.
@mbrualokouposman3242
@mbrualokouposman3242 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this 👍🏽
@DocMicrowave
@DocMicrowave 2 жыл бұрын
Very informative, thanks!
@randomgeocacher
@randomgeocacher 2 жыл бұрын
The oscilloscope, that was fun to see :) A bit off topic but as for the gen lock signal essentially being a black video/CRT image… this is basically still how many modes of HDMI/TMDS, SDI etc works. Vertical / Horizontal sync / blanking etc, so the output device more or less could be an DAC connected directly to an CRT. Solutions may be digital but the solution is still pretty rooted in how old analog technologies worked.
@SportFlow
@SportFlow Жыл бұрын
Super interesting. Learned a lot.
@attilathenun
@attilathenun 2 жыл бұрын
Hey Doug - thanks very much for the explanation. Definitely one of the best ones out there. Would you be able to do a video on LTC versus VITC and VITC's relationship with genlock?
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
I probably won't do a separate video. The difference between LTC and VITC is how it is stored with analog video. LTC is an audio track whereas VITC is stored in the vertical blanking interval as part of the video. Digital video usually stores timecode as metadata or as auxiliary data within a data stream. So they act differently in that way. The relationship between Genlock and time code doesn't change when you go from LTC to VITC or digital. Timecode is still just a number indicating what frame of video you're on and nothing more -- it still isn't used to tell a camera when to start a frame or line of video.
@mehdishahbeigi
@mehdishahbeigi 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome !
@davemcdonald3526
@davemcdonald3526 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Doug. This video filled in many missing bits of the puzzle for me also clarified the relationship between genlock and timecode.
@davemcdonald3526
@davemcdonald3526 3 жыл бұрын
Decoded the audio signal, It matched the timecode ( 01:20:14:00) on the monitor behind you.
@djp_video
@djp_video 3 жыл бұрын
Nice work :)
@georgeforall
@georgeforall 3 жыл бұрын
I remember using time base correctors on all of of our analog VTRs.
@djp_video
@djp_video 3 жыл бұрын
Yep. Been there.
@vincentcosta9957
@vincentcosta9957 Жыл бұрын
Haha wow. I'm listening to this video on IEMs, and I could actually hear that CRT monitor buzzing away at like 17k as soon as he brought it out.
@scottjarriel6761
@scottjarriel6761 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!!!
@nunmawia6910
@nunmawia6910 2 жыл бұрын
Very help ful.in formation
@randomgeocacher
@randomgeocacher 2 жыл бұрын
12:07 I guess often problems people were debugging probably were more related to repeaters, videomixers/hubs, etc on the cable run, or device specific issues, not actual cable delay/latency. Everything else usually is magnitudes slower than the actual cables. (I think electric cable delay at 1km is around 0.000003s (1000/299792458) and the double 0.000007s (50% of speed of light), which probably is significantly more actuate than device internals. Signals travels at about 70% of speed of light is often a good guess, close to truth for many mediums and signal types. ) …Usually when cable delay is suspected people are likely fighting some other problem and misinterpreting their experiences. Repeater delays, cable attenuation issues, device incompatibilities etc could easily be misinterpreted as long cable going out of sync due to length. That said for very long cable runs over extreme lengths, cable latency adds up. But not much if we discuss
@KellyAskam_MindExchangeMusic
@KellyAskam_MindExchangeMusic Жыл бұрын
Great video and presentation! Thank you! Was really nice to get more visual explanation of Genlock and Tri-Level Burst. I'm a production sound mixer for films and I've opted for the Atomos/Timecode Systems Ultrasync One for my clocking solutions because it's capable of all 3 LTC, Genlock, and Word Clock and has 2 ports so it can do more than 1 connection at a time. It came out about the same time as the Tentacle Sync and similar miniature clocking boxes by Ambient, Betso, Denecke, etc. LTC has worked well enough for most of the short video takes in narrative films, but it would be great to implement some genlock on longer documentary or event type gigs. I'm curious, how does Genlock affect a camera operator choosing to go "off speed" or use a variable frame rate to go back and forth capturing typical SMPTE frame rates and also slow motion/higher frame rates? Does the camera temporarily just ignore the incoming genlock and then pick it back up when filming at regular speed? Will the genlock even allow the operator to do that or will it need to be unplugged? Curious how that might work (and it probably depends on the camera's abilities?). Thank you, again, for the great education and I'll certainly be sharing this with my fellow sound mixers. Cheers!
@djp_video
@djp_video Жыл бұрын
It could vary by camera model, but the ones I’ve used will just ignore the genlock signal if it is at an incompatible frame rate.
@jasonlavalleur
@jasonlavalleur 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the info. Very interesting. Are there any tools to help sync audio and video? I would be interested in a video about video/audio syncing.
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
If you have timecode syncing them up is pretty easy. I'll be doing a video on that soon -- hopefully next week, schedule permitting. Without timecode you may have to rely on being able to sync audio. Video editing tools these days have audio sync capabilities. They're not the most reliable though. If nothing else, you can slate (clapper board) when shooting and sync up the audio spike with the first video frame where the slate is closed.
@ognjentoholj5991
@ognjentoholj5991 2 жыл бұрын
Great video Doug! How would you actually adjust timing on the longer cables. For example I am running 4 genlocked cameras with different cable lengths (15-40 meters) and cameras have option to adjust H phase. Do you use oscilloscope for such purpose to perfectly match the signals?
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
Genlockable sources usually have a timing adjustment. Honestly, I've never done long-distance syncing in HD. In the SD world we'd use a waveform monitor.
@TrinitronX
@TrinitronX 3 ай бұрын
The EE (Electrical Engineering) answer is that you generally won't run into time-domain signal issues with cable length until you approach the quarter-wavelength of the signal. In other words: Transmission-line effects become significant when the length of the line is comparable to or greater than the wavelength of the signal. A more specific general rule of thumb is one-quarter of the wavelength. Given the HD 1080p Genlock signal demonstrated at 10:28, we can calculate the maximum cable length for which we will begin to have to worry about Transmission-line effects: Full-cycle wavelength of 33.7159 KHz signal = 29185.0432 feet = 8897.8790 meters. 1/4 wavelength of 33.7159 KHz signal = 7296.2608 feet = 2224.46976 meters. So for transmission delays on a long cable, we would need to have a maximum cable length just under 1.38 miles! That's quite a long cable! If we go over that distance we might begin to look at other transmission options such as fiber optics or radio frequencies. More likely the issue that you'll run into first with longer cables is dealing with noise picked up by the cable itself from nearby sources of electro-magnetic fields.
@TomSidProductions
@TomSidProductions 7 ай бұрын
Basically: A master clock sync generator is important for live AV. Timecode Jamming is important for syncing in post.
@davids4030
@davids4030 6 ай бұрын
Hey Dough, Thx for the great explanation. Helps a lot. One question: I used a Blackmagic Decklink for SDI out a HD 25p signal with LTC. When I put this signal in Sony Venice 2 GENLOC in, it directly recognises it and a get a sync. But when I use the same signal with ARRI Alexa 35 (SYNC In), nothing happens. Does it somehow mean, that Sony uses the LTC for syncing? Best, David
@djp_video
@djp_video 6 ай бұрын
Genlock isn't SDI. I'm frankly surprised that anything recognized a signal from an SDI output. As covered in the video, there are two types of Genlock signal -- blackburst and tri-level sync. Blackburst is sometimes called bi-level sync. Blackburst is basically a black & white standard definition video signal. Tri-level sync is a simple series of pulses. SDI is very different and can't produce either of those. You'll need a proper genlock signal generator for any kind of compatibility with multiple types of cameras or other devices.
@austin63022
@austin63022 11 ай бұрын
Hi Doug! This is very informative video thanks! Quick question, my blackmagic 12k can't get 60fps genlock from AJA gen10( HD 720p60 ) . Is there any setting i did wrong? Thanks!
@djp_video
@djp_video 11 ай бұрын
Try setting the GEN10 to output sync for 1080i59.94. It's a different type of signal that I believe the Blackmagic cameras know how to use. The 720p sync signal has the wrong horizontal sync timing for 1080p/4K.
@speakstruth7742
@speakstruth7742 10 ай бұрын
Doug! That was a very informative video. I learned a lot. I love the look of your video. What's your lighting and camera setup?
@djp_video
@djp_video 10 ай бұрын
Sony PXW-Z150 primary camera, Blackmagic Design Micro Studio Camera for overhead shots (don't love it, but it works). Lighting is three LED panels -- a 60W panel just above me to my right, another 60W panel just above the camera, and a 30W panel just behind and overhead for a rim light.
@speakstruth7742
@speakstruth7742 10 ай бұрын
@@djp_video Man! I'm amazed that your light looks so soft with panels. Are you modifying/diffusing them? I would love a BTS of your setup. I was also surprised by your camera choice which is very different from most KZbinrs. I'm happy you can use different equipment and still get great results.
@djp_video
@djp_video 10 ай бұрын
The panels come with a plastic diffuser panel that sits right in front of the LED elements, but that's it. I'm primarily a live event video producer. For the types of things that I do, camcorder-style cameras make a lot more sense than the typical camera options used by most KZbinrs. I have to be able to shoot in a very wide variety of situations -- outdoor, indoor in well-lit rooms, indoor in poorly-lit rooms (almost always where we have no control over lighting); at varying distances from intimate interview closeups to conferences with the camera way at the back of the room, to sporting events with handheld roving cameras, and no other type of camera gets even close to handling all of those situations anywhere near as well as camcorders do. They were designed and built for that. ILCs and studio cameras might handle one or two of those situations alright, but they have some really significant limitations in others. The Sony PXW-Z150 camera that is my goto choice for most events, has a 1-inch class, 20MP sensor, so it's larger than your more traditional camcorders and broadcast cameras, giving it the ability to capture more light than other models, yielding less noise and more detail. But the sensor isn't so large that dealing with shallow depth of field with moving subjects is an issue either. The 20MP sensor lets the camera crop in on the sensor even in 4K without any loss of detail. The Z150 gives a 24X zoom range at f4.0 (12X optical plus 2X "Clear Image Zoom" which is amazing), so I can shoot both up close and far away and know that I'll get a good shot. The lens is also higher quality than the lenses that most people use with their ILCs, so the image detail is consistently a lot higher than I've seen (and gotten) from other cameras. The Z150 also costs far less than even a single, decent lens for a B4 broadcast camera. And when you do the types of events I do, having more cameras is almost always better than fewer "higher quality" models. Six cameras for an event is my general minimum. Having to purchase 6 or more of most other types of cameras with lenses and other required accessories puts you into big budget territory. For the handful of bigger budget events that come my way, where a true broadcast camera is required, I can rent them. I'm frankly shocked that anyone even attempts ILCs or studio cameras for mobile, on-location video work. I've tried them, and they are just so incredibly frustrating to use, and yield lower quality results. They just have so many more issues to deal with. Camcorders were designed specifically with these workflows in mind, so they tend to work really well.
@speakstruth7742
@speakstruth7742 10 ай бұрын
@@djp_video If I may ask... What's the make and model of your light panels?
@djp_video
@djp_video 10 ай бұрын
They aren't made any more. These are similar, though not exactly the same: amzn.to/3sIpCZd
@SveinWisnaes
@SveinWisnaes 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Doug. Love your channel and the info you share. And the video today was a fun walk down memory lane! I know the box on your desk very well (worked for Avid for some years). BUT - some of your info was wrong (NTSC/PAL) and it could actually be a good idea to make a video about that :-) Too much confusion floating around out there.
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
What did I get wrong? Perhaps I just misspoke.
@SveinWisnaes
@SveinWisnaes 2 жыл бұрын
@@djp_video You were not pushing it too hard, but still: NTSC, PAL and SECAM has nothing to do with framerate or resolution. Also, if you are not running composite RF, there is no NTSC and PAL. So S-Video, component, Digibeta and ALL signals in the digital domain has no NTSC, PAL or SECAM.
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
Okay, technically yes, but it's certainly implied and people watching would know what I meant. If I was to refer to System M, System J, NTSC M, PAL M, etc. nobody would have any idea what I was talking about. Those terms aren't used in common vernacular.
@SveinWisnaes
@SveinWisnaes 2 жыл бұрын
@@djp_video A lot of people say NTSC today and mean 480i. And unless we use the correct terms, new people will not learn. 480i, 576i, 720p30, 720p25, 1080i25, 1080i30, 1080p25 etc. You get the picture. :-D Why am I saying this? I have been teaching a lot, and unless the teachers use the correct terms, we can not expect the students to learn the right things. A good example is PAL with 29.97 fps and 525 lines.
@SveinWisnaes
@SveinWisnaes 2 жыл бұрын
Oh, by the way - you channel is kinda technically, isn't it :-D
@ThisIsLeeBird
@ThisIsLeeBird 2 жыл бұрын
I have three BMD studio cam 4k pros (no reference in), the BMD ATEM Production Studio 4K (has one reference in) and focusrite 18i20 (wordclock bnc) could I connect all of these from the BMD hyperdeck mini reference out? Daisy chain obviously, or what would be the best solution for this?
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
Since most of the Studio cameras don’t have a Ref In connection, they can’t be synchronized directly to a Genlock source. I believe you can set them to synchronize to the SDI input, which would effectively take care of many (though not all) of the reasons to use Genlock, like making sure that cameras all stay in sync with one another. That won’t help with minimizing latency, though. Using the Ref output of your HyperDeck doesn’t really buy you much of anything. The ATEM has its own internal clock and frame synchronizer and it runs just fine without a Ref input. Having the HyperDeck supply a reference signal only prevents the ATEM from skipping or doubling video frames from the HyperDeck and nothing else, and that would happen so rarely that I’m not sure it’s worth adding that additional complexity and possible failure point by making that connection. The Focusrite isn’t going to recognize the Ref signal from the HyperDeck - it is strictly used for Genlock. Word clock is an entirely different signal.
@dist-dev
@dist-dev 3 жыл бұрын
With many devices having a ref in and ref out is there any limitation to how many devices can be chained together, or any potential for a device that's connected directly to the signal generator to be out of sync with a device that has it's reference chained through a dozen other devices?
@djp_video
@djp_video 3 жыл бұрын
There isn't a hard limit. And it will depend on whether the signal is regenerated or simply passed through. It's better to use a distribution amplifier (any old-school video DA will work) and have separate connections for each device, but you can certainly chain one REF to another as long as you know those devices will be powered on.
@RealRickCox
@RealRickCox 3 жыл бұрын
When discussing SMTP with embedded audio... what happens if you have a camera drop a frame for some reason. Will this cause everything to get out of sync?
@djp_video
@djp_video 3 жыл бұрын
Most likely it would. Video editing apps typically only look at timecode at the beginning of the file. So if you have missing frames the video doesn't get re-synced.
@jameswadkins8082
@jameswadkins8082 Жыл бұрын
On the monitor behind on the desk displaying the video and time, it that an option on the Panasonic monitor to display the embedded time? Or are you using a different device display the tc info?
@djp_video
@djp_video Жыл бұрын
The monitor is a Sony PVM-A170 and it has a feature to display timecode built in.
@CaueBarcelos
@CaueBarcelos 9 ай бұрын
What kind of signal protocol the video reference connector output ? Is the same signal than a genlock ? What about the embedded sync signal, outputted by the SDI in / out of the atem switcher ? Time code ? World clock ? Or genlock …? Is there a way to extract that signal since atem mini extreme sdi doesn’t have a dedicated synch out , neither the cameras … ?🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
@djp_video
@djp_video 9 ай бұрын
The Ref Out connectors are generating Tri-Level Sync, which is a type of Genlock. These are analog signals. But that output isn't going to line up perfectly with the signal at the video input -- it has its own timing, mostly independent of the input (aside from frame rate). The Ref In connectors all support Genlock -- both older blackburst-style as we as tri-level sync. On some devices (like the Ursa cameras) the Ref In can also take timecode. But that isn't "normal." SDI includes sync information as part of the data stream, but it isn't so trivial to extract to do anything with -- you can't take an SDI output and connect it to a Reference or Genlock input, for example. Consumer cameras and the ATEM Mini switchers don't support genlocking. That's something that's usually reserved for professional, broadcast style cameras, with a few other exceptions here and there in the Prosumer range. I'm curious your use case in which you'd need sync from the ATEM Mini?
@SoCalVipers
@SoCalVipers Жыл бұрын
This was super helpful. I am trying to figure out how to properly sync a Dante network to video. If all of the video gear is is synced over SDI, can just one device be on genlock to keep audio and video in sync? We have 4 cameras. If all 4 cameras are on genlock. will the router, switcher, and recorders also be in sync?
@djp_video
@djp_video Жыл бұрын
When you say sync, are you referring to avoiding drift? Or lip sync where the same moment in time is seen on video as is being heard in the audio? They are different.
@SoCalVipers
@SoCalVipers Жыл бұрын
@@djp_video Thanks for your reply - I really love your channel. The first problem audio/video drift over time. It's a church, so we record for an hour. With all modern equipment, the drift is minor - like only a few frames. The second issue I'm having is more nuanced, but a significant problem. I am trying to use AES audio out of a Yamaha RiO stage box into a Blackmagic 12G Teranex Audio to SDI embedder. The result is that I get frequent audio dropouts on my recordings. My gut feeling is that it's a AES master/slave issue because the video system and audio system are not locked in time properly.
@pcuser80
@pcuser80 2 жыл бұрын
On the camera: The timecode changes from : to ; when the external timecode is plugged in. Is a semicolon a indicator for external timecode?
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
The semicolon denotes Drop Frame format.
@stardiumstudio
@stardiumstudio Ай бұрын
Hi from Tokyo. It’s great video but I have one question about sync. My audio network also use Dante and I’m using M5402 from studio tech as an external clock leader on Dante network. There’s DA-6400 recorder from Tascam also on the Dante network. If there are some audio devices not on Dante and i want DA-6400 and non-Dante devices in sync, in that case M5402 has word clock output so should I distribute it to DA-6400 & other devices word clock in, or no need for DA-6400 and just other devices word clock in?
@djp_video
@djp_video Ай бұрын
If you want your devices to stay in sync so you can line up recordings in editing, you will need to use a wordclock signal to do so. You can use the Word Clock output on your M5402 and distribute that to all devices with a word clock input. You can use a word clock distribution amplifier to split that signal to any devices that may need it. Additionally, your DA-6400 has the ability to pass through the word clock signal so its output can be uses to sync another device. Though the manual on the DA-6400 doesn't specify, I suspect that you could set it to follow the Dante leader clock and then use its Word Clock output to sync additional devices. That wouldn't be my preferred way to do it, but it should keep things synchronized whenever it is powered on.
@Mac40music
@Mac40music 2 жыл бұрын
Hey Doug, can you recommend some Genlock multicam master reference generators? I'm having difficulting finding modern units and brands.
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
Blackmagic Design has their Sync Generator product. AJA has the GEN10. There are still quite a number around.
@user-jd5yk6kn8s
@user-jd5yk6kn8s 2 жыл бұрын
For some models, such as canon r5c, the fuselage has only a separate time code interface instead of TC in interface. Can such interface be used to access genlock signal? I see the ref / TC in interface of BMD camera. You can accept two different types of X
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
No. Time Code and Genlock are different signals. The only cameras I've seen that support time code on the same connector as Genlock are the Ursas from Blackmagic Design.
@ivanchaparro8973
@ivanchaparro8973 2 жыл бұрын
Very informative! Quick question, in the tentical example, would that audio signal have to be maintained throughout the entire production or would a typical GH4 /GH5 mirrorless multi cam setup accept a temporary jam signal from a master TC generator? Thanks
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
If a camera has a jam sync feature you don’t technically have to maintain a connection to a master sync source, even though it would still be a good idea. But for cameras that don’t, you could get away with starting the beginning of each clip with timecode audio so the editor can sync the start of each file. The preferred way to go is to leave the master timecode source connected all of the time. Because timecode is just audio, you could split the signal from your timecode source to multiple cameras at the same time, the same way you’d split any other audio. I’ll be demonstrating one way of doing that in a future video.
@ivanchaparro8973
@ivanchaparro8973 2 жыл бұрын
@@djp_video looking forward to that video, thanks. I just picked up a Denecke SB-4 super cheap at a local pawn shop, will it’s BNC jack output TC audio? Can I just adapt to 3.5mm and jam a lumix camera?
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, you can connect to your camera. If your camera has a timecode decoder you can jam sync it. Otherwise it will just be an audio track.
@CrazyLogic
@CrazyLogic Ай бұрын
What scope are you using to see this - have you used it to see signals pre and post switcher to measure the insertion delay?
@djp_video
@djp_video Ай бұрын
It's an Owon SDS7202 (amzn.to/3z7jjS5), but nearly any oscilloscope will work -- these signals aren't particularly high in frequency. I haven't done a switcher latency test. With genlocked sources, and for signals not being processed through a scaler, the ATEMs processing delay is less than 10 lines. But, if your video source isn't genlocked, add an average of a half of a frame. If your video source doesn't match the switcher's video format, add another frame. If the source is being run through SuperSource or a DVE, add another frame. If the signal passes through a converter (SDI to HDMI, etc.), those will add a millisecond or so. Figuring out the exact processing delay using an oscilloscope is going to be really difficult, as the video output signal (SDI or HDMI) isn't going to have obvious synchronization markers visible on an oscilloscope. One could connect the output of a switcher to a device which will generate a sync signal from the source (like the HyperDecks do), but those come with their own processing delay.
@DrVikramShrivastava
@DrVikramShrivastava 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks. Very informative and useful video. while editing a video shot with multi-camera, the NLE software like Premiere Pro will syn the shots by itself. And this is very close to the 'Timecode' application. Please correct me if I am wrong. Genlock is of course different. Thanks Vikram (India)
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
When you have similar audio across different cameras, yes, Premiere and other editing apps can synchronize based on the audio waveform. But this feature doesn't always work. I've had it fail as many times as it has worked. If the cameras aren't placed close to one another, or if one camera picks up more background noise than another, or if audio isn't recorded on a camera for whatever reason, or if the audio in any other way differs significantly, you're on your own.
@randomgeocacher
@randomgeocacher 2 жыл бұрын
Do you know how old and new hyperdeck series handle sync issues in cameras, and does it matter if ref in/out is connected or not? I.e. will hyperdecks just take the frames from the cameras? Or will hyperdecks occasionally drop/pad frames if the cameras go out of sync with the recorders?
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
The Reference input on the HyperDecks is only used for playback. When recording it syncs to the incoming video signal.
@randomgeocacher
@randomgeocacher 2 жыл бұрын
@@djp_video thanks!
@iwannaTV
@iwannaTV 9 ай бұрын
craaaaaack
@markdebonis6803
@markdebonis6803 2 жыл бұрын
Hey Doug, thank you again for the info and help with my last question. But I have another if that’s okay - with the tentacle sync, do they have to stay on for the whole Day? Or can you shut them off and it keeps the time code? Just wondering if you have to re - sync every time they turn on. Thank you
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
You do need to re-sync when you turn them back on. If you use your cell phone as the time source it's pretty easy to do.
@markdebonis6803
@markdebonis6803 2 жыл бұрын
Okay thank you, is it recommended on a full day shoot to even turn them off if you don’t need to? Or would new time codes not really make a difference in editing. Thank you again for the reply
@Nachesko
@Nachesko 2 жыл бұрын
I´m a little late, so I dont know if you´re going to see this, grate content, I have a question: If i sync timecode first, and then connect gen lock between cameras and switcher ie. does the timecode stays synced with the jam, or is it going to drift? I mean if we´re starting the first pixel at the same time in all devices, the timecode should not drift, or is it?
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
The timecode and genlock signals would have to come from the same source. Otherwise the timing won't stay in sync. Higher-end sync generators will create both signals for you.
@dez5
@dez5 Ай бұрын
WOW, This Guy knows his Sh*t. 🤣🤣🤣
@JohnnyMotel99
@JohnnyMotel99 Жыл бұрын
What if you use a recorder monitor with SDI inputs? Does this get over the issue of DSLR's without any genlock capability?
@djp_video
@djp_video Жыл бұрын
Some models like the current HyperDeck Studio models from Blackmagic can re-sync the input to a genlock source (but they obviously don't adjust the timing of the camera itself). But in most cases that doesn't buy you much -- most modern video switchers have frame synchronizers built-in which do the exact same thing.
@the_newvoice
@the_newvoice 2 жыл бұрын
Hello! Thank you for complete explanation! I never knew that. Very interesting and useful. Does all these BNC cables are 75 Ohm or some are 50 Ohm as well? Or 75- audio clocking, 50- video genlock/time code? Thanks!
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
All are 75 ohm.
@the_newvoice
@the_newvoice 2 жыл бұрын
@@djp_video Thanks! I guess 50 ohms RF was for analog antenna stuff, but they're everywhere in the stores, maybe for older analog signals or something like that.
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
@@the_newvoice Yes, 50 ohm is primarily used for radio applications. The one big exception is over-the-air TV antennas, which are either 75 ohm (coax) or 300 ohm (flat).
@the_newvoice
@the_newvoice 2 жыл бұрын
@@djp_video Thank you!
@lansleyONE
@lansleyONE 3 жыл бұрын
Hi Doug, when you plugged in the cable to the TC IN Jack on the camera (at 26:00) not only did the the timecode change, but one of the colons changed to a semi-colon! What does that mean?
@RyanBoni
@RyanBoni 3 жыл бұрын
The semi-colon means that it is drop frame timecode (a regular colon is non-drop frame). Basically, since the frame rates, such as 29.97 and 59.94, are not whole numbers, every second is missing parts of frames (.03 or .06 in those cases), which will add up over time. So, with timecode, you can either ignore the missing frames and just keep counting or the timecode will drop frames on the counter so it accurately reflects the time, and so there are the 2 different types of timecode to notate that.
@djp_video
@djp_video 3 жыл бұрын
What Ryan said... ^^^
@lansleyONE
@lansleyONE 3 жыл бұрын
@@RyanBoni thanks Ryan, yes Doug did say he was running the system at 29.97fps so if understand it, the semi colon means that it is not running full frames per second (eg not 30). Thx!
@RyanBoni
@RyanBoni 3 жыл бұрын
@@lansleyONE ​ @Nick Lansley Sorry, I answered the question while the video was still playing before I heard Doug give a full explanation of drop frame/non-drop frame later in the video!! But, to answer your question, Nick, no the semi-colon or colon does not necessarily tell you one way or another if the system is running at 29.97 or 30. All that the appearance of the colon or semi-colon does is tell you if the timecode counter is counting all of the frames or not. Really, just think of it as 2 different counting methods. One precisely and accurately reflects the actual time elapsed and the other just keeps counting and will slowly drift from the actual time elapsed. The difference between the 2 is generally irrelevant, unless you are mixing DF and NDF together while editing things that were shot at the same time with different cameras, or if you need the timecode to accurately reflect the time of day or time elapsed for some specific reason. The general rule is to pick one or the other and just always use that one.
@georgeforall
@georgeforall 3 жыл бұрын
Hey Doug. I need to sync time code on three iso cameras. Hardwired is fine because they are all close to each other. Each camera has a single combo BNC TC in/out connection. I can master one and slave the second camera but how do I get the third camera to slave? Any ideas? I’m thinking of using the SDI out of cam 2 to TC input on the third cam. I have not tried that. Not sure that would work. Is there an external time code generator that you know of that has multiple outputs ( at least 3) that can run to the 3 cameras? Thank you!!
@djp_video
@djp_video 3 жыл бұрын
The "proper" way to do it would be to use an audio distribution amplifier to split the timecode output from one camera for the timecode inputs on the other cameras. But, in reality, you can use a simple cable splitter and it will work just fine. Audio is a lot easier to split than video. The SDI output will not work. It is a video signal, where timecode is an audio signal. Please keep in mind that time code does not keep cameras in sync. It only makes sure that when you sync up footage in your editor that the *beginning* of each clips is lined up properly. Cameras can (and do) still drift. If you are shooting clips more than about a half hour at a time you're likely to see that drift and will need to adjust the playback speed to compensate. The only way to ensure that cameras stay synchronized is to use cameras that support genlock and provide them with a genlock reference signal. Go back and watch this video again. It has all of the detail you would need to achieve what you want.
@georgeforall
@georgeforall 3 жыл бұрын
@@djp_video Thank you so much!
@georgeforall
@georgeforall 2 жыл бұрын
@@djp_video I just wanted to thank you for your advice. We ended up jam syncing the cams one by one. We didn’t lose a single frame all day. Made editing a breeze!
@foreignproduction5589
@foreignproduction5589 5 ай бұрын
this is great!!! I just started learning about Genlock and was trying to find out how does it actually work but there is very little information. THANK YOU! What about UHD? I cant find any 4k sync generators but forums say that Tri-level genlock will work fine. Just wandering.. is it just that first burst for communication when to start new line and pulse per second that matters? How UHD device translates HD genlock? is it simple scaling? I found diagrams showing to use Black Burst interlaces settings 625i25 PAL for 4kp video. I am so lost :) Can anyone explain ? Where an I find more resources ?
@djp_video
@djp_video 5 ай бұрын
Let's start from the base of information from this video. I'll build on that. (But I'm simplifying things at the same time too.) There are two separate synchronizations happening with Genlock ... Horizontal and Vertical. Vertical sync happens once per frame, and horizontal happens once for each scan line (including those that aren't part of the picture, which is kind of another discussion). Because the vertical sync is tied only to the frame rate and is independent of the resolution, many devices can use sync signals designed for lower resolutions when producing higher resolution video. So in theory a UHD camera could use blackburst, which is standard definition, for vertical sync. It would have to ignore the horizontal sync since those are tied to the resolution, but vertical sync is usually enough to line things up because the frame rates (24, 25, 30, 50, or 60 fps) is independent of resolution and therefore can be can be the same across SD/HD/UHD. So a 60 fps (frames or fields per second) SD sync signal can work for UHD running at 60 fps (frames per second). The other consideration is that blackburst was designed for interlaced video. And even though in the world of interlace video we usually refer to frame rates of 25 or 30 frames per second, each frame is made up of two separate fields, so the fields are being created at 50 or 60 frames per second. That also means that even though blackburst is syncing 25 or 30 frames per second, it is also syncing fields 50 or 60 times per second, and if you were to look at a blackburst signal you'd see vertical sync pulses 50/60 times per second. And HD and UHD cameras creating progressive video can use that field sync signal to synchronize progressive frames rather than interlaced fields, thus giving you compatibility between ancient blackburst signals and modern 4K cameras.
@foreignproduction5589
@foreignproduction5589 5 ай бұрын
Thank you@@djp_video This is all very fascinating. I've noticed you have YT subscription available but have you been thinking about Patreon? I can imagine you have a lot of knowledge to share, I would love to learn more.
@brokecitizen4934
@brokecitizen4934 Жыл бұрын
I still have an Amiga 2000 with a TBC card
@AmauryJacquot
@AmauryJacquot 3 жыл бұрын
so you're recording this at 1:30 AM :-) I'd like to see a GPS-disciplined master clock and sync / timecode distribution hardware from Blackmagic couldn't they create a sync signal that carries the tc data, say, in one of the 5 frame start periods ? all the new blackmagic recorders have sync AND timecode input and loop, I suspect the new generation of mixers will do too
@djp_video
@djp_video 3 жыл бұрын
The tri-level-sync signal was intentionally designed to be simple. In theory, yes, they could include timecode in there, but they've elected not to. Genlock is distributed using old-school analog video distribution amplifiers. Equipment which has an output can also be daisy-chained. Timecode can be distributed using any audio distribution amplifier. Both types of devices are really easy to find.
@CYBERSTORM101X
@CYBERSTORM101X 2 жыл бұрын
@@djp_video I don't know if you have heard of this yet but it's really interesting for keeping time synced across servers and could be implemented in normal computers and was curious if you could see a way to apply this tech too the video world it is also open source. kzbin.info/www/bejne/gHyWlod9oL1pp7s
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
@@CYBERSTORM101X There are quite a few devices of a similar type for the video world. Many of the companies making genlock and timecode hardware have options that will use GPS as their time source; it is a common way to go.
@imark7777777
@imark7777777 Жыл бұрын
Having the correct word means everything. So that's called iMAG! And wouldn't you know it if you put that in with NDI there's immediately a manufacture referenced page on the subject. I have a interesting set of production equipment one's my own and one's a composite merge mess from somebody who owns a lot of equipment that's presumer/consumer and likes to skimp and pinch pennies but then waste money. I've been slowly transitioning to an NDI Mevo system. I finally got him to buy a third camera. this was due to size and help restraints so I've been minimizing cables and equipment as much as I can, unfortunately I still end up with a video production table that needs to be set up and broken down from a couple laptops. I feel I'm getting decent results but he always has to find something wrong. One of these was the major lag between camera and projection display. I really should not have done it but it was badly delayed and they were in front of the projection screen in a theater so I couldn't really blow it up that much either so it was slightly redundant and delayed.
@gavinturner
@gavinturner 2 жыл бұрын
Using Dante as a means for transporting the timecode LTC signal have you ever run into any issues with there being a drift in timecode due to the latency from the dante network? I know on a well put together dante network you should expect sub 1ms delay of latency but is that not enough to off set the timecode that's being received after the dante network to that which is being generated from the master timecode clock?
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
No. Timecode is only accurate to a frame (at 30 fps, 1/30 of a second, or 33ms). Dante's latency is usually well under a millisecond.
@gavinturner
@gavinturner 2 жыл бұрын
@@djp_video thanks so much for the quick response, this will definitely make life much easier on big multi cam OB setups. So in theory then if you used for example the Focusrite's RedNet PCI card on a PC and mapped one of the tracks to record the LTC you could use a computer as a secondary cheaper multi-track audio recorder with timecode accuracy? What software would you then recommend using to convert the timecode track and map it to the wav Poly file such that any editing software could then import that and timecode sync with pictures?
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
I'll be demonstrating how to do this in a video coming up shortly. The software that I'll be using is Tentacle Timecode Tool from Tentacle Sync. But many editing applications can decode LTC natively as well.
@card-joker5301
@card-joker5301 3 ай бұрын
Hello, do I understand correctly? Timecode is always also an audio signal? Would it be possible to transform the TC - out from a zoom f8 via bnc to xlr or jack and go into a dslm camera? I assumed that audio timecode is different from bnc timecode. If this works I will solder with a bnc to xlr/jack. Best regards!
@djp_video
@djp_video 3 ай бұрын
It isn't always audio, but it is usually basically just an audio signal. Dedicated timecode connections, including BNC, are essentially just audio. I don't have a Zoom F8 to test, but it probably is just an audio signal. But to connect it to a DSLR/mirrorless camera's microphone input you'd need to drop the level unless your specific camera can be set to accept a line-level signal. The F8 would be outputting something around a line level, but the camera is expecting microphone level. But that's easy to do.
@card-joker5301
@card-joker5301 3 ай бұрын
@@djp_video thank you so much! So i need to add a resistor too. Thanks alot
@SportFlow
@SportFlow 3 жыл бұрын
Why did you pick up the EF URSA instead of the URSA Broadcast? For the type of work you do, the B4 lens mount seems to be a better choice, is it?
@djp_video
@djp_video 3 жыл бұрын
When I got this the Broadcast version didn't exist yet. And I haven't gotten one because I've heard from many people that the low light performance isn't very good.
@SportFlow
@SportFlow 3 жыл бұрын
@@djp_video Oh I see. Hopefully blackmagic will renew their broadcast camera soon. The entry-level studio camera with the MFT mount and the pro-level with the B4 mount. Seems legit.
@AusEdge
@AusEdge 3 жыл бұрын
@@djp_video Hey Doug, the sensor does suck a lot of light, however when adding gain you don't get the usual graininess you normally see until +12 or even more. We have a few of the URSA broadcast, and do similar work to yourself, our crew love them, and would never go back to our older Sony cameras
@djp_video
@djp_video 3 жыл бұрын
@Mark Edge, what kinds of events are you shooting? We do a lot of indoor events without additional lighting. In those situations the Sony cameras with 1-inch sensors are the best thing I've found by a wide margin.
@Bullhorn1001
@Bullhorn1001 2 жыл бұрын
My question is how I turn a genlock signal into wordclock? Or how to make sure no sync issues occur when using Dante audio in live video production? Got any tips?
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
I'm not aware of any devices that will take a genlock signal and create word clock from it. But there are multiple options out there for devices that will create both though. Cameras which are genlocked should maintain audio sync with other genlocked sources. In terms of integrating with Dante, you'll want a mixer that has a word clock input, and then set that as the timing leader for the Dante network.
@BenFranske
@BenFranske 2 жыл бұрын
@@djp_video I use an ESE DV-321 which will derive a 48khz wordclock (and an AES11 signal) from genlock. It's a (relatively) inexpensive way to keep audio in sync with video over long periods of time.
@igoraugusto20
@igoraugusto20 2 жыл бұрын
Hey, can someone tell me the name and the brand of that vector scope behind him?
@djp_video
@djp_video 2 жыл бұрын
Blackmagic Design SmartScope Duo.
@igoraugusto20
@igoraugusto20 2 жыл бұрын
@@djp_video Thaaaank Yoooou!!!
@duchmais7120
@duchmais7120 Жыл бұрын
Ursa Mini Pro 4.6k G2 or 12k? Support
@djp_video
@djp_video Жыл бұрын
Both cameras support timecode or genlock.
@VegasDominic
@VegasDominic Жыл бұрын
Atem sdi extreme vs constellation 1ME HD - - Constellation has Ref In - ATEMS do not…. Really thinking about it… 🧐 - Video cameras - Switcher - LED Videowall - iMag live singer
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