Thanks for doing this, Nathan. I did note one little possible error in your post, so I threw up a comment on the Discussion tab. Might want to check it out.
Seems logical to me so I've asked the Q on the reclock forum so I'll update with what comes back.
Also, for what it's worth, there is very little video out there of any source (unless poorly encoded) that is actually 24p, 30p, or 60i. When they say that, they actually mean 23.976, 29.97, and 59.94. The only modern examples would be very old archive NTSC video from before there was color broadcast, like some of that on Archive.org and the Library of Congress site.
You are correct on the origins of 23.976, but I don't think the statement on source material is complete as there is a difference to how material is recorded vs transmitted and the techniques used, eg I'd suggest:
1) FILM based material is shot in 24p. It may be then either
a - slowed down to 23.976p and telecined to 29.97/59.94i for NTSC Transmission compatibility,
b - speed up to 25p for PAL Transmission compatibility, or
c - while it can be stored as 24p on blu-ray discs it is usually slowed down to 23.976p (for better NTSC compatibility)
2) TV based material is usually shot in 59.94i (called 60i) or 50i (eg News, TV Docos, Sport etc) and can also be stored on Blu-ray in these formats
FWIW... The philosophical reason that Microsoft originally chose to use the audio clock in the computer, is that audio quality is more important than video quality. This is a well known "fact" in the industry. Audiences will accept poor image quality (especially when done for effect, like handheld shots or DV cam footage for the "home video" look) but they will not accept poor quality audio or sync issues. There have been a ton of studies on this very subject.
I love the unattributed "men in white coats" proved....."insert fact here". Given the very specific nature of this post, let me know the actual studies that shows users preference of perceived quality in playback between:
1) Dropping / Adding Video frames to keep sycn with the Audio track (how it is done by a PC)
2) Resample Audio stream to keep sycn with the Video track (how it is done using Reclock on the PC) [/quote]
That's actually one of the reasons I don't use ReClock myself. It messes with the audio, and I'd rather see the very occasional bout of jitter, than worry about the audio quality fluctuating all the time.
Ahhh but it does not "mess" with the Audio, it just resamples it (just like happens with the JR plugins, the mixer on your PC, your Receiver). The two things I hate about Blu-ray has been the fight on the PC platform to get smooth jitter free video and lipsync, which lead me to this obsession! The Video streams on these discs have 24 frames per second so 1 extra or less frame is pretty easy to see. The sample rate for Audio on most Blu-ray disks is usually 48,000 times per second so if it is resampled at 48,040 or 47,060hz to keep pace with video do you think I'll hear the difference (reclock will even do a slight Pitch Correction)? Note, Unlike the Video Option I'm not adding or dropping any Audio Frames - just resampling. One thing that does get me laughing is all the effort some people appear to go to then output these HD audio over SPDIF, now how is that for "messing" with the Lossless Audio streams that are available....
Of course, I'm in NTSC land, and the jitter problem with 24p video isn't very bad here (and if it bothers you, just upgrade to a 120hz or 240hz display and the problem will completely vanish).
The ideal option is a refresh rate divisible by 24 (film), 25 (pal), and 30 (ntsc), so while 120hz is a good single refresh rate for NTSC folk, it not so good for us in PAL land and given the ability of monitors to take any frequency, you may as well switch to the one you need for the media being played.
The real problem in PAL land isn't 24p video (which as you mentioned, is just sped up and played at 25p), but is actually with playing NTSC video. The pulldown pattern for displaying 29.97 progressive video (or 59.94 fields per second if interlaced) isn't a good one.
I think you are probably right on this, and suspect it is just what we get used to. The original use of reclock was to play PAL encoded 25p material back to the slower original film 24p to fix the 5% audio pitch problem. However, being brought up in a PAL contry it just sounds normal to me so hence it is not annoying. Likewise I suspect that telecine judder is something NTSC viewers are used to and hence just don't notice, yet as a PAL'er it is noticeable to me (but your right native 60i material is not a great look at 50hz). I'll also grant that 24p material looks much better at 60hz than 50 so noticeable judder is more pronounced for us in PAL land.
Anyway - all gets back to - if you can adjust your Monitor's frequency to that (or a multiple) of the frame rate of the media you are playing back then that is a good start. The next bit is on what method is used (if you care) on keeping the Audio and Video in sync.
Thanks
Nathan