Patent Document

This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 07/236,265, filed Aug. 24, 1988, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 875,811 filed Jun. 18, 1986, both now abandoned. 
    
    
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     1. Field of the Invention 
     This invention relates to a disk player typically used for a video disk. 
     2. Background Art 
     In the case of, for example, a video disk player, a desired picture sequence can be scanned in a fast mode while a playback image is viewed by moving a pickup in the radial direction of the disk at a speed higher than that at the time of normal playback. During the scanning, a tracking servo loop is set open for a fixed interval of time (e.g., between 5 to 10 ms) as shown in FIG. 5 and a pickup is moved in the radial direction of the disk at a speed higher than that at the time of normal playback to make the disk cross several hundred tracks. Then the tracking servo loop is closed at a subsequent fixed interval and the pickup is caused to follow the one track. Thereafter, the above operations are repeated. 
     If the above scanning is carried out in the conventional apparatus, the video signal, as it is, will be supplied to a CRT when the tracking servo loop is opened, as well as when the loop is closed. As a consequence, if the disk is, for example, a CLV (Constant Linear Velocity) disk, noise will appear on a picture plane because synchronizing signals in video format signals on tracks adjacent to each other are not correlated. The thus generated noise will spoil the view. When the locked picture plane with a fixed color is scanned as proposed by the present inventors (Japanese Utility Model Application 115082/84), the noise becomes conspicuous in particular and the disadvantage is that the commercial value of the operation is extremely reduced. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     Accordingly, an object of this invention is to eliminate the above described problem of noise in special scanning. 
     The disk player of the present invention performs special playback by moving a playback in the radial direction and causing the playback to jump over a plurality of tracks. The disk player comprises a demodulating circuit for demodulating a received video signal, an eliminating circuit for eliminating image data contained in the demodulated video signal produced by the demodulating circuit and control means for controlling the eliminating, circuit according to the correlation between the synchronizing signals over the tracks. According to the invention, at the time of the special playback, the demodulated signal is generated unchanged when the synchronizing signals in video format signals on the tracks adjacent to each other are correlated. However, the image data is removed from the demodulated signal when the synchronizing signals in video format signals on adjacent tracks are not correlated. As a result, an image of good quality is obtained by preventing the transient jumping image signal from appearing on the picture plane in the form of noise. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a disk player embodying the present invention. 
     FIGS. 2(a)-2(d) are waveform charts of the disk player of FIG. 1. 
     FIG. 3 is a circuit diagram of the eliminating circuit of FIG. 1. 
     FIG. 4 is a waveform chart of the eliminating circuit. 
     FIG. 5 is a explanatory diagram illustrating scanning in a conventional apparatus and the waveform chart thereof. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
     FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a disk player embodying the present invention. In FIG. 1, there is shown a circuit including a demodulating circuit 1 for demodulating a video signal received as an RF signal. An eliminating circuit 2 receives the demodulated signal produced by the demodulating circuit 1 and produces the signal with or without eliminating the image signal. A control circuit 3 controls the operation of the eliminating circuit 2 and includes an AND gate 4 whose one input receives a CLV signal having a high level when a CLV (constant linear velocity) disk is mounted. The other input of the AND gate 4 receives a loop control signal having a high level when a tracking servo loop for the pickup is opened. The CLV signal and the loop control signal are supplied by a control device such as a microcomputer (not shown). 
     FIG. 3 shows an eliminating circuit 2 embodying the present invention. The output signal of the demodulating circuit 1 is supplied through an input buffer amplifier 11 to a clamp circuit 12 and then to an output buffer amplifier 13. The clamp circuit 12 is a series circuit which comprises a resistor 14 connected in series between the buffer amplifiers 11 and 13, a diode 15 connected between the input terminal of the buffer amplifier 13 and ground, a switch 16 and a power supply 17 in the connection to ground. 
     The operation of the disk player will now be described. Assuming that a CLV disk is mounted and being replayed, the control device detects the type of the disk and supplies the CLV signal at a high level to one input terminal of the AND gate 4. On receiving a playback command, the control device moves the pickup in the radial direction of the disk at normal speed and closes the tracking servo loop and supplies to the other input terminal of the AND gate 4 a signal at a low level when the tracking servo loop is closed (FIG. 2(c)). Consequently, the output of the AND gate 4 is at a low level when the tracking servo loop is closed and inhibits the eliminating operation of the eliminating circuit 2. Thereby the demodulated signal (FIG. 2(a)) supplied by the demodulating circuit 1 is the same as the signal (FIG. 2(d)) supplied to the CRT (not shown). As the pickup is following the track (the level of a tracking error signal (FIG. 2(b) is low)), a normal playback picture is obtained and no noise appears thereon. 
     On the other hand, the output of the AND gate 4 is at a high level when a scanning command is received and the tracking servo loop is opened (so as to disregard the large tracking error signal in FIG. 2(b)) and the eliminating circuit 2 operates so as to eliminate the image signal from the received video signal and outputs an image-free signal. 
     When the eliminating circuit 2 is so arranged as shown in FIG. 3, the switch 16 is turned on while the AND gate 4 is producing the signal at a high level. When the switch 16 is off, the video signal (horizontal synchronizing signal) supplied to the input buffer amplifier 11 is left unchanged and supplied through the resistor 14 to the output buffer amplifier 13. When the switch 16 is on, the diode 15 conducts and the potential of the buffer amplifier 13 is clamped at a potential which is the sum (V 1  +V 2 ), where the potential V 1  is the potential of the power supply 17 and the voltage V 2  is the forward voltage of the diode 15. The image signal is clamped at a black level as shown by a broken line of FIG. 4 and is practically eliminated. Thereby the input-signal of the eliminating circuit 2 shown in FIG. 2(a) produces an output signal shown in FIG. 2(d). A black image is thus displayed on the picture plane and no noise appears which would spoil the view. 
     When a CAV (Constant Rotation or Angular Velocity) disk is mounted, the CLV signal is at a low level and the output of the AND gate 4 is also at a low level. The operation of the eliminating circuit 2 is thus always inhibited and the demodulated signal supplied by the demodulating circuit 1 is supplied without being changed. In the case of the CAV disk which is different from the CLV disk, however, the positions of the horizontal synchronizing pulses on tracks adjacent to each other (each track containing one image signal) are aligned with each other in the form of a radial line. Since the image signals are correlated, the signals will not produce noise spoiling the view. Accordingly, if the image signal left unchanged is supplied rather than being clamped at a black level, it will form a good picture image. 
     Although it has been arranged that the image signal is clamped at a black level, the signal may be clamped at a level of another color such as white or gray as long as it is clamped at a level of fixed color. 
     The disk player performs special playback by moving a playback head in the radial direction and causing the playback head to jump over a plurality of tracks according to the present invention. The disk player comprises a demodulating circuit for demodulating a received video signal, an eliminating circuit for selectively eliminating image data contained in the video demodulated signal produced by the demodulating circuit and control means for controlling the eliminating circuit according to the correlation between the image data over the tracks. The invention is characterized in that, at the time of the special playback, the demodulated signal is, generated unchanged when the synchronizing signals in video formal signals on the tracks adjacent to each other are correlated. However,. the image data is deleted, from the demodulated signal when the synchronizing signals in video format signals on adjacent tracks are not correlated. As a result, an image of good quality is obtained by preventing the jumping image signal from appearing on the picture plane in the form of noise. Accordingly, the present invention is particularly effective for a system wherein a fixed color is used or locking purposes during scanning.

Technology Category: 5