I was watching an interview (YouTube) with Anne Lucas (Australian who wrote for Prisoner: Cell Block H and played Fay Quinn) and she was saying when she grew up in Perth (in the 50s, first station 1958) and she was talking about a "test pattern." Then she said, the station used to sign on in the afternoon air children's programs then sign off, then sign back on around 6pm and air adult TV until 10pm.
Then then she explained what a test pattern was, and the co-interviewer said, that he remembers his TV station signing in at 4pm and the family would turn the TV on at 3:45pm and watch the test pattern for fifteen minutes till the station came on.
Basically Anne said that the test pattern was used to calibrate the signal, which sounds right. I grew up in Chicago and I recall WFLD TV32 signing on around 10:30am (in the 70s) but the test patterns I saw were all colored bars and not like the "Indian Head" patterns I see when I google the term.
I assume stations also ran test patterns rather than shut down because it was hard on a transmitter to shut down and restart so it was easier to just broadcast a test pattern. Did this save any money in terms of power?
So I thought it'd be interesting if any of you had any old stories from either work or home regarding "test patterns," if so I'd like to hear them.
Then then she explained what a test pattern was, and the co-interviewer said, that he remembers his TV station signing in at 4pm and the family would turn the TV on at 3:45pm and watch the test pattern for fifteen minutes till the station came on.
Basically Anne said that the test pattern was used to calibrate the signal, which sounds right. I grew up in Chicago and I recall WFLD TV32 signing on around 10:30am (in the 70s) but the test patterns I saw were all colored bars and not like the "Indian Head" patterns I see when I google the term.
I assume stations also ran test patterns rather than shut down because it was hard on a transmitter to shut down and restart so it was easier to just broadcast a test pattern. Did this save any money in terms of power?
So I thought it'd be interesting if any of you had any old stories from either work or home regarding "test patterns," if so I'd like to hear them.
