The vertical hold needs adjusting, or the sync pulse is missing or corrupted by interference. Or a fault in the sync separator circuit. It must be an old telly, modern ones are controlled by inbuilt computers.
In the (almost old school) NTSC broadcast standard, there are two "flavors" of sync pulses in the TV signal: vertical and horizontal. Recall that the picture is painted on the screen one line at a time. There are 525 lines to paint, and all the odd ones are painted in one "field" and then all the even lines are painted on in another "field" to create the whole picture. The picture is painted on the screen by the electron beam (the "cathode ray"), and the beam needs to be told which line to paint and when to start painting that given line. The vertical sync pulse sets up the beam for a line, and the horizontal sync pulse tells the beam when to start "painting" that line. Then the next vertical sync pulse will "step the beam down" two lines (remember that it's skipping a line 'cause all odds then all evens are painted), and the horizontal sync pulse will cause the beam to begin its sweep for that line. Two sync pulses - vertical and horizontal. Each one arriving to tell the sweep control circuits what line to paint and when to begin painting it. Piece of cake.
The motion of my hands is rhythmic and fluid as I create the pulse. I move my hands in a coordinated manner, alternating between opening and closing them to generate the pulsing sensation. The movement is controlled and in sync with the beat, creating a continuous flow of energy.
No
you need itunes, and sync it on itunes (it says sync ) at the bottom right
you can not reverse the sync
Go into iTunes and click on your device. Then there will be a tab that says music and check Sync All and then click sync at the bottom :)
The past tense of "sync" would be "synced".
hit the sync button on the wireless adapter and the sync button on the guitar
The duration of Out-of-Sync is 1.75 hours.
Out of Sync has 208 pages.
The neck pulse is the corotid pulse; the wrist pulse is the radial pulse; the arm pulse is the brachial pulse. it seems that the pulses are named according to the artery palpated; therefore, your thumb pulse must be your princeps pollicis pulse. this is an educated guess.