Averagesupernova said:
I can't speak for anything but NTSC but H and V holds were on TV sets in the USA long after the NTSC standard was set in place. This standard places the sync pulse at max power on the envelope. This is the opposite of what you described
@sophiecentaur.
It is true that the early AM TV in the UK used 'positive' modulation, with the max envelope was at peak white and the minimum was at the bottom of the sync pulses. This system used bands I and III (VHF). I can't say how CATV was done because it was uncommon in the UK (Rediffusion was one of the very few companies in UK) but I believe it was compatible with the broadcast positive mod (it would have to have been as the sets were used for both. Vertical hold adjustment was necessary even when there was only one available broadcast channel (BBC) in Band I. A second (Commercial) channel was available in fewer locations and it used Band III. Transmitters were not co-sited, which meant the signal strengths were different.
625 line mono was put in the UHF bands in the 60s and that used negative mod. Frame roll would only have been a problem in marginal areas with bad multi path conditions. The (initially) three UHF channels were always on co-sited transmitters and I seriously cannot remember any sets having dodgy sync adjustment. It may have been because there was a National Coverage Plan and reception was fairly uniform from channel to channel. People used to use rooftop antennae except in well served areas. A single, fixed wideband receiving antenna did the job. By the late 60s there was almost universal UHF coverage and the compatible PAL system appeared. There were a number of "Dual Standard (405/625) sets available in UK and they would have needed different front ends, IF and demodulators. Not a lot of use in most locations in UK except that 'rich' people could have been suckered into buying one to deal with the switch over phase.
As for 'controls', I do remember that NTSC receivers needed colour / tint controls where the more modern PAL system largely eliminated the need for anything but saturation control. The demodulated colour subcarrier phase was much better behaved than in the NTSC system.
Not the opposite. In my earlier post, I said that positive mod was for low definition 405 line TV and that negative mod was used for the 'HD" system. The whole organisation of TV signal delivery was different in the US, as I remember and, because of the commercial nature of the system and the population distributions, there were far more people in the US who had many more available channels to watch and they were in different sites. That may have meant that receivers needed to deal with more varied conditions.
Edit: It is, I suppose, possible that early NTSC sets also used positive mod. I know that the US were is a great hurry to develop their TV service because of its commercial basis so it could have been brought out with a bad choice of modulation system. Surely your UHF system would have used negative mod. The UK were well behind you in TV development.