U.S. patents available from 1976 to present.
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Method and apparatus for maintaining audio/ video synchronism in a television signal read-out from a digital buffer memory by a reference signal

Patent 4851909 Issued on July 25, 1989. Estimated Expiration Date: Icon_subject September 16, 2008. Estimated Expiration Date is calculated based on simple USPTO term provisions. It does not account for terminal disclaimers, term adjustments, failure to pay maintenance fees, or other factors which might affect the term of a patent.

Patent References

Apparatus and method for transmitting a pulse width modulated audio signal on a video signal
Patent #: 4333108
Issued on: 06/01/1982
Inventor: Quan ,   et al.

Signal recording and/or reproducing technique
Patent #: 4442461
Issued on: 04/10/1984
Inventor: Shirai ,   et al.

Digital audio synchronizing system with mute time switching function
Patent #: 4618890
Issued on: 10/21/1986
Inventor: Kouyama ,   et al.

Digital audio synchronizing system with cross-fade means
Patent #: 4644400
Issued on: 02/17/1987
Inventor: Kouyama ,   et al.

Apparatus and method for receiving audio signals transmitted as part of a television video signal
Patent #: 4665431
Issued on: 05/12/1987
Inventor: Cooper

Audio to video timing equalizer method and apparatus Patent #: 4703355
Issued on: 10/27/1987
Inventor: Cooper

Inventors

Assignee

Application

No. 07/245916 filed on 09/16/1988

US Classes:

348/512, Locking of video or audio to reference timebase348/518, Including compensation for transmission delays348/738, Sound circuit386/100, Fault condition compensation386/101, Time compressing386/104, Digital audio signal386/115Crosstalk

Examiners

Primary: Groody, James J.
Assistant: Parker, Michael D.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

International Classes

H04N 5/04 (20060101)
H04N 7/54 (20060101)
H04N 7/52 (20060101)
H04N 7/085 (20060101)
H04N 7/084 (20060101)

Foreign Application Priority Data

1987-09-24 DE

Abstract

Both the analog and the video component of a television signal are converted to digital form, the audio component being converted at a much lower sample rate with a word length which is an integral multiple of the video word length. The digital audio component is then compressed by use of a temporary memory and read-out therefrom at a rate that is half of the sample rate of the digtal video component, after which the word length is halved and the word rate doubled in a shift register circuit. In that form the audio component is inserted in horizontal blanking intervals of the video component in a compatible form by a multiplexer, the output of which is read into a single picture field or full picture memory under control of an address generator clocked in synchronism with the incoming video component. The buffer memory is read-out at a rate controlled by a reference signal such as is used for synchronism in a television studio. On the output side the digital video and audio components of the television signal are separated by a demultiplexer, the audio word length is doubled and the word rate halved and the still compressed audio signal is expanded, to make available a substantially continuous digital component. The audio component can then be converted to analog form and will be correctly timed for accompanying the digital video component converted to analog form at the output of the demultiplexer. Separate audio signal delay circuits are thus avoided by the use of relatively simple multiplexing circuits and audio processing circuits.

Other References

  • "Fernseh-und Kino-Technik", No. 5, 1981, pp. 175-177
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