Appendix C
SMPTE Timecode
The Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers (SMPTE) timecode may be one of the most misunderstood concepts among
individuals within the music industry. The problem with SMPTE timecode formats is that they may mean different things to people in
the audio and video fields. What follows is a brief description of each SMPTE timecode format.
Important:
When synchronizing audio to video, it is crucial that the SMPTE timecode format used in the sequencer or
digital audio workstation is the same as the SMPTE timecode striped onto the video. This guarantees that the SMPTE times
on the video screen and computer monitor synchronize during playback.
SMPTE 25 EBU (25 fps, Video)
SMPTE 25 EBU timecode runs at 25 fps (frames per second), and matches the frame rate used by European Broadcasting Union (EBU)
television systems.
SMPTE 25 EBU format is used for PAL DV/D1 video projects.
SMPTE Drop Frame (29.97 fps, Video)
SMPTE Drop Frame timecode runs at 29.97 fps, and matches the frame rate used by NTSC television systems (North America, Japan).
SMPTE Drop Frame format is used for NTSC DV/D1 video projects.
Both SMPTE Drop and SMPTE Non-Drop run at 29.97 fps. In both formats, the actual frames are not discarded, but they are numbered
differently. SMPTE Drop removes certain frame numbers from the counting system to keep the SMPTE clock from drifting from real
(“wall clock”) time. The time is adjusted forward by two frames on every minute boundary except 0, 10, 20, 30, 40, and 50. For example,
when SMPTE Drop time increments from 00:00:59.29, the next value is 00:01:00.02.
SMPTE Non-Drop Frame (29.97 fps, Video)
SMPTE Non-Drop Frame timecode runs at a rate of 29.97 fps. This leads to a discrepancy between real (“wall clock”) time and the SMPTE
time, because there is no compensation in the counting system as there is in SMPTE Drop Frame.
SMPTE Non-Drop format is used for NTSC D1 video projects that are recorded on master tapes striped with Non-Drop timecode.
SMPTE 30 (30 fps, Audio)
SMPTE 30 is an audio-only format and runs at exactly 30 fps. SMPTE 30 is commonly used when synchronizing audio applications such
as multitrack recorders or MIDI sequencers. This format is not used when working with video.
SMPTE Film Sync (24 fps)
The SMPTE Film Sync time format runs at 24 fps (frames per second). This frame rate matches the standard crystal-sync 16/33 mm film
rate of 24 fps.
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