So what do Sky Sports use they use HD 1920x1080i cameras surely or is it because it's a subscription channel so they can afford the high end cameras? I am pretty sure ITV HD is 1920x1080i as well maybe its some transponders that are using 1440x1080i presumably the Freesat ones you are referring to.
You're confusing location pre-recorded acquisition (which is shot on single-camera camcorders like HD Cam and DVC Pro HD) with live coverage, which is shot on multi-camera system cameras like LDK 8000s and HDC 1500s. These system cameras are just a camera, nothing else. They don't have a recorder in them, they have a cable (or a radio link) back to a truck where they are cut/mixed and/or recorded.
If your channel is mainly live/as-live multi-camera content, or edited highlights of this, then your system cameras will output 1920x1080, you'll cut it live, and output that straight to the viewers at home, or pre-record it and show it later. These systems use lots of power, on-site generators, with most of the gubbins in an air-conditioned truck the size of a large articulated lorry etc. Sky Sports is mainly this style of production. (If you pre-record it to HD Cam, or an EVS running DVC Pro HD codec, not HD Cam SR (or an EVS running a DNX 185 or ProRes codec) then you introduce a 1440x1080 process though)
If your channel is mainly single-camera location shot content, like documentary, specialist factual, current affairs, low-mid budget drama, then you will be shooting on small, self-contained battery powered camcorders. (Which are likely to be HD Cam or DVC Pro HD, and thus whilst the camera front-end may well be 1920x1080 - in fact it usually is - the back-end recorder is subsampling to 1440x1080 3:1:1 or 4:2:2)
You wouldn't cover a live football match with HD Cam or DVC Pro HD camcorders - they are for single camera operation. You wouldn't shoot a documentary with Michael Palin on an LDK 8000 - there's no recorder in it, you'd end up having to heft around a separate recorder, and lots of batteries...
It's like comparing Apples with Oranges. No - it's like comparing Apples with Broccoli!
The main issue with camcorders until very recently has been that it is very tricky to record a full quality 1920x1080 HD signal on a light, quiet, self-contained, battery powered camcorder with a decent recording time. To get enough data onto a small enough tape (or disc or flash card), but at a decent running time, you have to reduce the amount of data you record. Some of this can be done through data compression, but with the compression algorithms that can be supported (remember complex processing takes more computing power which usually means more battery power and more cooling) another way of reducing the amount of information that needs to be recorded is to subsample the horizontal resolution to 1440 (or lower - DVC Pro HD is 1280x1080 at 60i and 960x720 at 60p...) Both DVC Pro HD and HD Cam are now pretty 'mature' codecs - and newer standards are replacing them with the benefits of newer compression, more powerful processing etc.
Sky Sports will almost certainly generate a lot more 1920x1080 content via their live multi-camera coverage than BBC One HD will with it's mix of location single-camera content and multi-camera stuff. If the BBC ran an entirely sports based channel, or an entirely movie-based channel, or an entirely US-import channel, then there would be a much stronger argument for 1920x1080 broadcasting.
However whilst the bulk of their output is still 1440x1080 and only a relatively small proportion is originated 1920x1080, the argument is less persuasive. If they were doubling the licence-fee to provide me with HD (as Sky effectively charge over-and-above their SD channel costs at a little over £10/month) then I'd think differently.
I'd much rather have clean 1440x1080 than artefacty 1920x1080 if I'm honest.
And Sky Sports sacrifice a lot of their horizontal resolution by using too much artificial detail enhancement... (So their pictures 'look crisp' but artificially so)
Last edited by noggin on 7 July 2011 1:08am