On Mon, Oct 07, 2002 at 09:08:03 +0200, Thomas Grill
wrote:
The final
scratch plates have time info encoded in the signal. Not that
I know much about it, but I'd imagine that was, in fact, the only thing
encoded in the signal; can't think of much use for anything else.
Well i guess encoding absolute time should not be too hard.
A simple solution could be to have the two stereo channels with different
frequencies, with the ratio corresponding to the radial position.
Or is that not accurate enough?
I think stereo is an encoding on records, you
might not be able to encode
that.
You could do it with two mixed signals though, a saw and sin of the same
aplitude. The sin could start at just higher frequency than the saws
fundamental and end fairly high, then you can just do frequency extraction
to find the position.
Maybe you could use a Grey Coding technique to determine position and
speed in one. Or data recorded in a 8bit computer loading noise type way.
records include stereo information by having different sounds on each wall
of the groove. It seems like teh easiest solution would be to just write
SMPTE LTC to one side and something like word clock or black burst on the
other.
<relurk>
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