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PAL 60Hz is an unusual standard but one that was fairly common in Europe for a number of years.

PAL is the European color encoding standard and European video is refreshed 50 times per second, or 50Hz. NTSC is the North American standard for color encoding and North American television is refreshed at 60Hz. It is important to note that the frame rate is not related to the color encoding method used although by convention NTSC signals will be 60Hz and PAL will be 50Hz.

Some European televisions could handle 60Hz signals but did not had an NTSC decoder. For that reason, a range of video players were fitted with an NTSC to PAL converter. The conversion between the two is a fairly straightforward process and can be done with virtually no loss of quality. The conversion from 60Hz frame rate to 50Hz is a far more complex operation and difficult to perform without significant losses (a high end broadcast standard frame rate converter can be in excess of $50,000!). So, the video player was content to deliver a signal that was still 60Hz but encoded into a PAL signal. Many televisions could handle PAL 60 so the result was a full color image but using 60Hz signals.

Less common is NTSC 50. North American televisions have rarely been able to handle PAL signals because there is far less demand for European content on the US compared to US content in Europe.

It is worth mentioning that when material crosses from American to Europe, broadcasters will always perform a frame rate conversion as well as encoding into PAL so PAL 60 is never seen as a broadcast standard.

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Q: What kind of tv's are pal 60?
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