When 576i is used to transmit content that was originally composed of 25 full progressive frames per second (576p25 or 576p/25), the odd field of the frame is transmitted first (this is the opposite to
480i). Systems which recover progressive frames or transcode video should ensure that this field order is obeyed, otherwise the recovered frame will consist of a field from one frame and a field from an adjacent frame, resulting in 'comb' interlacing artifacts. Such progressive content can be marked using
encoding flags, for example in DVDs or other
MPEG2 based media. == PAL speed-up ==
Motion pictures shot on film are typically intended to be played back at 24 frames per second. When
telecined and played back at the PAL standard 25 frames per second, films run 4.1% faster than the original, and 4.2708% faster than the NTSC film standard 23. frames per second. This increase in speed also increases the pitch of the audio by about 70.672
cents. Digital conversion methods can correct for this increased speed and play the video back at its correct speed and pitch, at the expense of a decreased audio sample rate. Some movie enthusiasts may prefer PAL over NTSC despite this increased speed, because the latter results in
stutter, a visual distortion not present in sped-up PAL video, where different frames last for uneven amounts of time. This is generally not an issue on modern
upconverting DVD players and
personal computers, as they play back 23. fps video at its native frame rate. Another method of converting 24 fps footage to 25 fps is the
Euro pulldown, where every frame of the original footage is distributed into two fields, except every 12th frame which lasts for three fields. This preserves the pitch and sample rate of the audio, and the higher resolution of PAL video compared to NTSC, at the expense of more stuttery motion. Yet another method is
frame blending, which preserves smooth motion but leaves
ghosting artifacts, although it has been criticized by some as looking amateurish. PAL speed-up does not occur on footage intended for playback at 25 frames per second. == See also ==