The Primers
CLV and CAV
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CLV and CAV CLV and CAV Defined |
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There are a number of features on the laserdisc player or DVD that you should be on the lookout for. First, it should have the capacity to perform visual search forward and reverse (you see the image moving quickly forward or backward, to relocate an interesting scene), and to freeze single frames. This should be capable in both the CLV (Constant Linear Velocity) and CAV (Constant Angular Velocity) formats for LD players (DVD players only use one format). Constant Linear Velocity means that the laser beam is reading data along the spiral track at a constant speed (11 meters per second for laserdisc, 1.2 meters per second for compact disc). As the track spirals from the center of the laserdisc to the outside edge, the rotation speed has to slow down from 1800rpm to 600rpm (500rpm to 200rpm for compact disc), in order to maintain this constant linear velocity of reading the data (the circumference of the outer edge is greater than it is at the center). Constant Angular Velocity means that the angle between a line drawn perpendicular to the radius and through the spot where the laser beam is reading data, and the curve of the spiral track, remains essentially constant. In practical terms, this just means that the CAV disc rotates at a constant speed all the time (1800rpm). LPs, then, would also be considered a type of CAV disc, rotating at a constant 33 1/3 rpm.
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