About Pixel Aspect Ratio
Some video and film formats use rectangular instead of square pixels. This explains why NTSC and PAL video formats have a different frame dimension in terms of pixels, but are ultimately broadcast to the same 4:3 aspect ratio screen.
- NTSC pixels are narrower than they are high, which allows for the 720x486 (1.481) aspect ratio frame to fit into a 4:3 (1.333) aspect ratio broadcast screen.
- PAL pixels are wider than they are high, which allows for 720x576 (1.25) aspect ratio frame to fit into a 4:3 (1.333) aspect ratio broadcast screen.
When you capture video or import film frames that use rectangular pixels into Flame, the pixels become square because computer graphics work only with square pixels. This is why the NTSC and PAL frames appear as though they are different size—displayed with square pixels, they are.
You can set the Player to display clips originating from rectangular pixel formats using View Settings Use Ratio to simulate the use of rectangular pixels. This provides a display that corresponds with the delivery format.
Using the aspect ratio display affects system performance, so if you are using the aspect ratio filter in the Player and notice a performance slowdown, you can disable the option and return to square-pixel display.