@@MrCoreyTys The job was like all types of employment dome good days and then again bad. Though on the whole it was a sort of privileged occupation because on the whole people where glad to see you may be that was because I worked for one of the largest TV rental companies and people did not have to pay for the repairs. For a young man back then a free company van you could use privately and as time went on estate cars became the norm. To sum it up Young single man Living in Liverpool in the 1960s with a free car a good wage for the time life back then was good. Though like all good things it does not last though living through all that music and Liverpool clubs such as the Cavern the Iron Door and the Blue Angel to name but a few gave me a lot of good memories now looking back.
I remember as a young teenager being home alone at night after my little sister had been rushed to hospital with a dangerously high fever. I sat in front of the TV all night with this test card on to not feel so alone and anxious. Seems so strange now to look back and remember that being the only thing I had to watch on TV during the night
They are still used today, even on new TV's. If you want your picture just right you gotta use one. Don't mind this auto adjust gimmickry, everyone's eyes are different.
I actually have the physical Norwegian Test Card F :) When I started at NRK R&D, I took over the offices of a retired engineer who hadn't bothered to clean out anything. And sure enough, gingerly packed inside a 4x5" slide film box, there it was.
@@AdamMartyn Right? I was actually quite surprised - the iconic Norwegian one is the Philips PM5544/PM5644, and I had no idea that Norway ever used Test Card F. They were packed in with other "memorabilia" from the earliest colour TV tests in Norway. We were very late to that party - first colour test transmissions began in 1972. Studio 1 was monochrome until 1985! (In fairness, very often used as a sound stage for film.) Actually until the laws were revised for digital terrestrial around the turn of the century, the terms of the license were still "experimental colour broadcasts". :)
Growing up in the 80's, I only remember seeing testcard G by NRK (as well as DR and SVT). Then with satellite TV, I remember other broadcasters having different testcards, mostly just bars, or sometkmes other patterns.
To say I'm envious is an understatement. One of my TV fantasies was to befriend a TV engineer who worked behind the scenes, and be invited to a TV broadcasters, 'back rooms', where, having expressed a great interest in the works involved, but given some kind of memento in the shape of an actual test card, or even one of their old electronic test card, 'black boxes', (preferably a Philips PM5544), that they were going to throw out, anyway. Pure fantasy, of course. But reading your story reignited my memory of thinking it.
Growing up in New Zealand in the early 80's I never saw Test Card F, so I was watching this with an interested detatchment, but when Test Card G appeared I felt 40 years drop away and there I was, 6 years old and waiting for the sunday morning cartoons to start. Wow.
Pure nightmare fuel as a kid 😂 It’s 1996, I sneak down stairs at 5am to watch come cartoons on our new spangle Sky box. I flick the tv on to be greeted by Carol Hersee and her clown along with eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeat full volume. I never messed about with the tv after that 😂
Exactly the same for me. As a toddler in the mid 90s, I remember a couple of times coming downstairs too early on a Sunday morning, turning on the TV by myself in the dark, and being met with the test card, and the awful test tone just made it even eerier.
Never thought I’d spend 20 odd minutes of life watching a program about the test card. All the times I’d want to turn the TV off once the channel closed down or I woke up on the couch. Brilliant and informative 👏👏
@@pauldoree3967 Yes there is indeed so too. The Test Card Circle, of which I have been a member since 1996. It has its own magazine four times a year too, which is really great too. It also has a convention once a year in April which is open to members too.
@@brucedanton3669 I believe they were responsible for the appearance of the CD of the music, much of which was of very high quality. (And yes, it does have a few seconds of tone, too …)
Test Card F is one of the best ever. That little girl and her clown doll Bubbles were so iconic, BBC2 and other commercials caught notice and made their own versions of it.
Having more TV screen time than anyone else in world history is an incredible claim to fame, and it's highly unlikely that anyone will ever beat her. Bubbles was the scariest toy I'd ever seen when I was a child. Thanks to Adam, I at last know the name of my early morning childhood tormenter! ;-)
Yes, I don't think that record will ever be beaten, since test cards aren't transmitted much these days. Somewhat similar to Nana Mouskouri's sales of _physical_ records (78/LP/single/cassette/CD) clocked up over about 65 years, since few purchases of physical records take place these days.
Despite those who would deride the presence of the test card F on our TV screens, I always felt a certain degree of comfort/affection toward it, growing up. The immortal words of the presenters saying, '... we return to a trade test transmission', with a slight pause before the card came up and the music started seemed rather homely and wholesome. In that, even when there were no programmes on, they still wanted to have their presence felt by any who continued to watch. Like welcoming an old friend into your house. The musical element added to that, with the selection of music being, (generally), easy on the ear, and complimented the test card itself, very well. Hearing any of it now instantly takes me back to a time when things were far less complicated, when you could spend a few hours chilling out, listening to anything from light orchestrations to funky jazz/electronica.
@@G6JPG That would be Flyback FBCD 2000 - Test Card Classics - The Girl, The Doll, The Music. They also did a follow-up one called FBCD 2001 - Test Card Classics 2 - Big Band Width. Then there's 10 CDs released by Apollo Sound entitled, 'From The Archives - Test Card Music', with the appropriate number.
Why would they do that ? If she was left handed she could have quite easily posed the other way round as it is a still picture and requires no physical dexterity whatsoever ?
Nice video. We don't use it on the air, of course, but Card F is seen in our master control at WLIO Lima, Ohio as part of the screen saver on a computer.
Same here I run away as a kid every time test card was on it was the clown and high pich tone I hated. I love test card music I've got records and cds. . But now asked my boys for the plush toy of bubbles the clown 😂😂 👍
thank you , i can remember as a young apprentice tv engineer in the early 80's timing a delivery or new installation when a customer was very specific that they wanted to see and check your set up with the test card , most were just happy to get a watchable picture but we did deal with some high end customers who could be very demanding , great times happy memories , was lucky enough to meet through my work some great tv personalities my favourite had to be Tony Hart , who lived less than a mile from where i live now , he was never demanding just charming and very welcoming into his home
Brilliant as always. Fun fact about F that I don’t think was mentioned is that the “X” in the game of noughts and crosses is the exact centre of the image 😎. Another bit of design genius from Mr Hersee.
why does this make me cry? I used to watch this on late sleepless nights in the early to mid 00s in my grandmother's house as I kept the tv on throughout the night to help my fear of sleeping in a Bungalow house (people walking outside) The noise of the testcard amongst 24 hour news was comforting.
As a kid in the 60's I would watch the local (NSW, Australia) test cards waiting for the early morning cartoons to start. I now find old B&W test cards to be fascinating. : )
Thanks for this one Adam, you've done a great job at reminding me how old I am! I live in West Yorkshire and clearly remember our first Decca 14 inch TV arriving in around 1954. Even though I was only 2 at the time, I really do remember. At that time, we got the BBC from Holme Moss on a massive X aerial on the roof of our farmhouse. The next important event I remember is my dad's workmate calling round to ours with his long screwdriver. He was like a wizard as he stuck it into the front of our TV and twiddled it about. When I got older, I realised he was fine-tuning channel 10 to bring in ITV in time for its opening day. The new signal came from Emley Moore. I remember asking my dad's friend if we needed another aerial, and he said the picture was perfect, so the BBC one would do fine. Now, what the heck was a three year old doing, asking if we'd needed a new aerial? I have no idea, but it's true! I'm now 69, and have lived a life full of TV, radio, satellite, and electronics in general. That little black and white picture was the best thing ever, then, oh wow, colour. Now here I am watching a 55 inch TV receive programmes from a satellite some 22,300 miles in space! Who would ever have thought it back then in the 1950s?
@@AdamMartyn Yes, as a _television_ image, it'd be hard to beat. (Some of the shots of the Adele Dixon film perhaps - I covet the "gallons per minute" meter - but Carole probably wins hands down, especially given the internationalness of it.) Actually, even among images that are _not_ specifically to do with television, it's probably pretty high - certainly up there with the Mona Lisa and the Che one, though maybe some of the ones of the late Queen might pip it, because of stamps and currency.
Test card F has always fascinated me yet it still unnerves me whenever I look at it. When I was little it used to TERRIFY me, to the point at which it became my biggest fear 😭 I was born in 2000 and I remember seeing it still in use. I used to avoid watching TV at night in case it came on 🥴
It’s very interesting to me that you still saw it! I’m a few years older than you but I only ever remember seeing “Pages From Ceefax” at night; my first exposure to Test Card F was actually in _Life on Mars._
@@sundaygirl4299 ahh, that explains it - I never had access to BBC HD, as my family never had satellite, and even convincing for a Freeview box in 2007 was a lot of effort! Perhaps what you saw was Test Card W, then? :)
As a child of the 60’s I remember what seemed like an eternity, sitting in front of the huge tv that had screen doors to hide it as it wasn’t an accepted piece of furniture back then, and watching this test card in black and white waiting for the ten minutes of ‘watch with mother’. It was as boring as the test card but it was all we had. They were not ‘good old days’ , It’s wonderful how technology has moved on and how much entertainment and education our young people have today at the touch of a button.
If you had a TV with doors on it to hide the screen ,when not in use ,you must of been very posh . Most people could only afford to rent a TV back in those days . You also had to bash the TV to steady the picture ,they were wooden boxes full of glass valves .
A great overview! I think my nostalgia quota for the day has been well and truly met! I watched this visually picturing the old family TV sets I saw it on. Thank you for bringing back such warm memories.
You're one of those channels that can make a video on something I've never even considered thinking about, like the history of British television, and make me care about it. Wonderful documentary!
Just scanning the airwaves for TV signals on the Dutch coast and then running into Test Card F was always something special. I instantly knew I was recieving something from the UK and it was a nice change of scenery across all of the boring Philips and Telefunken cards locally.
I might really enjoyed that test card F because of that Girl. Even She was older, I will never forget her because of a iconic test card in UK TV History.
I was a T.V. engineer in the 70,s and was surrounded by t.v,s in my workshop with this testcard, brilliant peice of artwork and of course all the info that us "repairmen" needed ,we could even "converge the R.G.B. to a degree without using cross hatch generators!.. one true story that I like to tell ,is when "ceefax" came to the BBC, you would have pages and pages of information from the news,weather and even a"todays recipe" page and with all sorts of music for added entertainment, on this particular morning, I had ceefax running on a test t.v. and "todays recipe" came up, the recipe was for "lamb hotpot" I laughed so hard when I realised that the music they chose to play for the page was a version of "sheep may safely graze" by mendelson!!! a true story from the late 70,s that I still smile at today,...🤩
Yes the noughts and crosses were ideal for convergence checks . Colour sets back then didn't travel well with the older delta tubes . The manufacturer's advised that new TV's were set up in the customer's homes , so we always had a pattern generator and degaussing coil on the van. But you could at a pinch do most of it and get reasonable results with test card F.
Thanks for posting…I first remember seeing test card F I believe in 1967 on BBC2, I can remember as a child trying to figure out the different colours by their shading, on our very old Sobell black&white TV😄
I used to love watching pages from Ceefax as we didnt have a Ceefax ready TV. Once we finally got one I was so excited. Playing Bamboozle every morning before school and checking the TV Guide. The simple joys....
I knew the photographer who took the photo of Carol Hersee for the test card. The late David Jones, who worked at the BBC and drank at my local pub in Newdigate, Surrey. A jolly nice chap he was too.
That test card was damn useful when you had a tv with basically a clothes hanger sticking out of it for an aerial. Twiddling the tuning knobs and the aerial, trying to get a good enough signal so all the lines would be nice and straight on the test card was a frustrating experience.
I was born in 1972 so grew up with the testcard girl. It would go off air at lunchtime on BBC 2 for play school. If I remember correctly it done a countdown on the test card
Wow, Adam has pretty much started pumping out new documentaries almost every 3rd week or every month! No words... 😄 And a fun fact: your documentaries helped me to get the best marks in English! (I needed to make an infographic - I made 20 facts about BBC)
Another informative piece on how things are different "across the pond". In the US we call it a test pattern, and it was more prevalent when I was growing up. Of course before 24/7 broadcasting stations would play the national anthem at close down, and then it would just be static. Home Box Office (HBO) had a little animation of a man yawning and calling it a night when they would go off the air in the early 1980's.
To be honest I find your test pattern slightly more useful in that it includes an infrablack segment, whereas these test cards seem to only go down to black. Though of course our test cards allow for alignment and convergence testing too all in one go, while your test patterns have different ones for those separate from the colour bars :)
Very rarely remember it on BBC1 but it was up on BBC2 for hours and hours during the day! TV was grim as a kid during the summer holidays in the 1970s. BBC1 had some sport on, BBC2 was the testcard and ITV had some black & white feature film. That was it.
Another real quality AMTV documentary - enthusiasm, and accuracy, but no talking-down. Why can't the BBC - or any other channel! - make stuff like this these days (except perhaps where David Attenborough presents)?
This was both a wonderful and sometimes jarring trip down memory lane over 42 years of my life. I have memories of a lot of the images shown being on tv whilst I was getting ready for school and college and even uni for a brief spell. And then work. Such simpler times. Makes me want to move back to Sussex and live on the rural coast again. Thanks for the video man. I’ve subbed for sure.
I can still remember back when I was in my early teens I would sometimes stay up watching late shows on the TV and quite often fell asleep on the sofa until that high pitched tone would suddenly wake me up. I often thought those four grid things in the corners looked like speakers, heaven knows why. I guess that was my imagination back then as a kid. That clown doll did look terrifying though I will admit. But it's such an iconic image from TV broadcasting back in the day. Another great childhood memory for many of us.
i hope you do more of these doccumentaries. i find this stuff really fascinating. since im 20, and didnt experience things like this, i find these stories really interesting. keep it up!
I'm not sure if another comment has mentioned this, but when BBC 3 was about to return to the air, a modified version of Test Card X had been seen on several test transmissions prior to it launching. The only difference was the "HD" text being in a more standard font, without the diamond surrounding it. Was gutted to have missed these transmissions as I'd have loved to have seen the test card in the flesh. There was also a way you could see it via BBC Red Button, but having tried it recently, it unfortunately no longer works. Amazing video nonetheless, I learnt a few new things from it
Great, I had completely forgotten about the test card f, used it all the time in the 70s and 80s to check quality especially on VCR recording, with the higher frequency gratings showing the capability of any selected machine.
If I can digress a little from the subject, you reminded me about the first experiments in breakfast T. V in Scotland which was a live feed from BBC Radio's 'Good morning Scotland'. It must of made an impact as I remember listening to it avidly whilst getting ready for school.. .. .
Hi Adam. Just found your channel and have subscribed. Thanks for the large dose of nostalgia. I was a 70's kid and loved all the different ITV identity logos. Even though I grew up in turbulence times in Belfast , when you're a kid you still lived in a sort of magical time.
Well, here it is. Congrats on making 1000 videos, man, that is dedication and what a way to celebrate with a long, entertaining and generally interesting documentary! 👏 👏 👏
I loved the music playing over it and have made many tapes when I was able to either use one of those primative tape recorders or a vhs recorder. Nowadays the music is available on RUclips.
It was also used in That Mitchell and Webb Look as the emergency broadcast system screen introducing the post-apocalyptic 'Quiz Broadcast' comedy sketches, where the noughts and crosses game was replaced with messages such as "mummy won't wake up"
TCF never bothered me as a child until around late 1982 when Russell Harty had a testcard special on his evening show on BBC2, featuring Jack Douglas, I think it was. Can't remember exactly what it was that happened, but it creeped the living bejesus out of me, and I was never the same after that...
I did like the Post apocalyptic test card from The Mitchel and webb look. Also, there was a easter egg in one of the lego star wars games showing the test card in lego form.
As a non-brit, that's actually how I first encountered test card F! I stumbled upon some of the post-apocalyptic segments on youtube a few months ago and so that's what it's associated with in my head
Have just done test card artwork, with Rose Tyler holding chalk with a Tardis on the board, dalek instead of clown 🤡 R Instead of F and BAD WOLF replacing BBC TV. Wish I could show it to you, this is excellent video
Until recently, a version of TC 'W' was available on Freeview through a set of remote control keypad strokes. It was a rather poor resolution version so no real loss. I'm glad I kept a recording of the BBC 1080i TC on my PVR with 5.1 tones.
I suppose what's so strangely eerie about test card F is that it would only appear late at night when I wasn't supposed to be up and it was such a mystery why it existed. Also, Bubbles the clown was 2spooky4me.
You might be interested to know that the testcard shown at 16:05 is not Testcard W, but is an early "we need something..." modified version of F. It's missing the extra arrowheads at the side and has the F version of the picture in the middle with the over saturated clown and with the same framing as F that crops out the clowns hand holding the chalk. The proper version of W (as seen at 15:25) came along a few months after the unofficial wide version of F.
It was known to broadcast 24 hours a day as a hidden channel on Freeview, right up until only a few years ago. You had to go to the BBC red button service, press a complex combination of buttons, then Test Card W would appear. I tried it for myself, it really was available. But looking around, the whole system changed some time after 2014 and nobody now knows how to get it, or if it's even still provided as a hidden feature.
They were still using Test Card W in the Netherlands some years ago, around 2018. I was in Amsterdam, I did some Amsterdam things, went back to my hotel and fell asleep with the TV on. Woke up at 2am with that bloody tone and that bloody clown that had terrorised me as a kid and nearly bloody screamed. Quick way to sober up...
As a teenager I once saw Test Card F in real life in the early 1980s. The TV sports series Superstars was being filmed in my town, and at the local swimming pool I saw a TV camera pointed at a large print of the card, propped up like a photo frame. One interesting feature was that the small black letterbox-shaped rectangle above the photo was actually a cutout hole to a small black box attached to the back of the card. I assumed that this was a way of ensuring that the rectangle was pure black, avoiding any reflections otherwise present on the printed card.
My main memory of test cards was how they emphasised that many televisions could not properly display even the undemanding 4:3 picture format, usually clipping a fair amount at the sides. Edit: Corrected 5:4 to 4:3. 5:4 was probably closer to what one often actually got, compared with 4:3 for the transmitted picture.
I remember on early colour sets the picture was massively overscanned such that the centre image was the only part of the tesr card visible in colour. Also the clown's body looked more like a shiny balloon than soft fabric.
NOW, for the audio part of the BBC, I absolutely love David Lowe’s version of the news. It’s very British and full of Royalty. I’m so glad that I bought the limited edition of the CD from the BBC. These days the BBC needs to go back to that theme. So glad that I have a C-Band satellite receiver.
I don't remember the test card girl, as local tv stations used the Philips pattern. I do remember the 1kHz test tone and Ceefax from the couple of times i accidentally pushed the TXT button on the BBC channel (mid-late 90's). This video has cleared some things up for me.
Oh man, I remember that Ceefax - it was when I was like 8 or so (2002) and it was like discovering a secret world. There was a specific button on the remote, and 4(?) tabs could be seen, news weather and possibly a catalogue? No idea about the fourth. That… sent me back.
As a now retired TV Engineer that started work in the 1960's I have a framed TEST CARD F hanging in my hall just for the memories.
lol
So cool!
oh wow! how was the job then?
@@MrCoreyTys The job was like all types of employment dome good days and then again bad. Though on the whole it was a sort of privileged occupation because on the whole people where glad to see you may be that was because I worked for one of the largest TV rental companies and people did not have to pay for the repairs. For a young man back then a free company van you could use privately and as time went on estate cars became the norm. To sum it up Young single man Living in Liverpool in the 1960s with a free car a good wage for the time life back then was good. Though like all good things it does not last though living through all that music and Liverpool clubs such as the Cavern the Iron Door and the Blue Angel to name but a few gave me a lot of good memories now looking back.
@@jas20per I don’t mean to sound rude but how old are you?
I remember as a young teenager being home alone at night after my little sister had been rushed to hospital with a dangerously high fever. I sat in front of the TV all night with this test card on to not feel so alone and anxious. Seems so strange now to look back and remember that being the only thing I had to watch on TV during the night
As a retired TV engineer I thoroughly enjoyed this video - brilliant.
Thank you Richard! Hope it brought back some happy memories! 😊
**test card f***
As a former TV engineer, I spent many an hour with Test Card F. Carol and her clown were a very useful assistant.
They are still used today, even on new TV's. If you want your picture just right you gotta use one. Don't mind this auto adjust gimmickry, everyone's eyes are different.
I actually have the physical Norwegian Test Card F :) When I started at NRK R&D, I took over the offices of a retired engineer who hadn't bothered to clean out anything. And sure enough, gingerly packed inside a 4x5" slide film box, there it was.
What an ace piece of TV history to hold on to! 😁
@@AdamMartyn Right? I was actually quite surprised - the iconic Norwegian one is the Philips PM5544/PM5644, and I had no idea that Norway ever used Test Card F. They were packed in with other "memorabilia" from the earliest colour TV tests in Norway. We were very late to that party - first colour test transmissions began in 1972. Studio 1 was monochrome until 1985! (In fairness, very often used as a sound stage for film.)
Actually until the laws were revised for digital terrestrial around the turn of the century, the terms of the license were still "experimental colour broadcasts". :)
Growing up in the 80's, I only remember seeing testcard G by NRK (as well as DR and SVT). Then with satellite TV, I remember other broadcasters having different testcards, mostly just bars, or sometkmes other patterns.
To say I'm envious is an understatement. One of my TV fantasies was to befriend a TV engineer who worked behind the scenes, and be invited to a TV broadcasters, 'back rooms', where, having expressed a great interest in the works involved, but given some kind of memento in the shape of an actual test card, or even one of their old electronic test card, 'black boxes', (preferably a Philips PM5544), that they were going to throw out, anyway. Pure fantasy, of course. But reading your story reignited my memory of thinking it.
get it valued. could be worth millions !!!!!!!!!!
Growing up in New Zealand in the early 80's I never saw Test Card F, so I was watching this with an interested detatchment, but when Test Card G appeared I felt 40 years drop away and there I was, 6 years old and waiting for the sunday morning cartoons to start. Wow.
Pure nightmare fuel as a kid 😂
It’s 1996, I sneak down stairs at 5am to watch come cartoons on our new spangle Sky box. I flick the tv on to be greeted by Carol Hersee and her clown along with eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeat full volume.
I never messed about with the tv after that 😂
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
You and me both. Every time I turned the tv on after that I’d mash the buttons on the remote to get into the next channel.
Exactly the same for me. As a toddler in the mid 90s, I remember a couple of times coming downstairs too early on a Sunday morning, turning on the TV by myself in the dark, and being met with the test card, and the awful test tone just made it even eerier.
@@perishingtardis always when we tried to sneak a crafty hour of cartoons In 😂
Always the "full volume"!! 🤣 😖
Never thought I’d spend 20 odd minutes of life watching a program about the test card. All the times I’d want to turn the TV off once the channel closed down or I woke up on the couch. Brilliant and informative 👏👏
I believe there is actually a test card appreciation society
programme*.
@@pauldoree3967 Yes there is indeed so too. The Test Card Circle, of which I have been a member since 1996. It has its own magazine four times a year too, which is really great too. It also has a convention once a year in April which is open to members too.
@@brucedanton3669 I believe they were responsible for the appearance of the CD of the music, much of which was of very high quality. (And yes, it does have a few seconds of tone, too …)
Test Card F is one of the best ever. That little girl and her clown doll Bubbles were so iconic, BBC2 and other commercials caught notice and made their own versions of it.
That they did! But no others were arguably ever as iconic as the original! 😁
@@AdamMartyn For sure. The original Test Card F just cannot be topped
Having more TV screen time than anyone else in world history is an incredible claim to fame, and it's highly unlikely that anyone will ever beat her.
Bubbles was the scariest toy I'd ever seen when I was a child. Thanks to Adam, I at last know the name of my early morning childhood tormenter! ;-)
Yes, I don't think that record will ever be beaten, since test cards aren't transmitted much these days. Somewhat similar to Nana Mouskouri's sales of _physical_ records (78/LP/single/cassette/CD) clocked up over about 65 years, since few purchases of physical records take place these days.
Despite those who would deride the presence of the test card F on our TV screens, I always felt a certain degree of comfort/affection toward it, growing up. The immortal words of the presenters saying, '... we return to a trade test transmission', with a slight pause before the card came up and the music started seemed rather homely and wholesome. In that, even when there were no programmes on, they still wanted to have their presence felt by any who continued to watch. Like welcoming an old friend into your house. The musical element added to that, with the selection of music being, (generally), easy on the ear, and complimented the test card itself, very well. Hearing any of it now instantly takes me back to a time when things were far less complicated, when you could spend a few hours chilling out, listening to anything from light orchestrations to funky jazz/electronica.
There is a CD.
@@G6JPG There's more than one. There's many CDs available that contain the music in question.
@@j0hnf_uk There's one particular one with TCF on the cover.
@@G6JPG That would be Flyback FBCD 2000 - Test Card Classics - The Girl, The Doll, The Music. They also did a follow-up one called FBCD 2001 - Test Card Classics 2 - Big Band Width. Then there's 10 CDs released by Apollo Sound entitled, 'From The Archives - Test Card Music', with the appropriate number.
Fun fact Carol is left handed so they actually flipped the slide round to make it seem as if she’s right handed.
Another fun fact is that the letter X on the board represents the exact centre of the screeen.
@@stephenmatura1086 I had heard that too, but pausing on the different variants, the X is slightly off centre until J, onscreen at 15:07.
Why would they do that ? If she was left handed she could have quite easily posed the other way round as it is a still picture and requires no physical dexterity whatsoever ?
Yup; sounds about right (no pun intended) discrimination against us left handed folk was more wide spread back then.
I don’t believe you. The X and O aren’t reversed.
Nice video. We don't use it on the air, of course, but Card F is seen in our master control at WLIO Lima, Ohio as part of the screen saver on a computer.
Still used within the BBC well the 1080 version.
Was it used on the air back in the day?
@@mat2000100 Didn't you watch the video? Yes, it was - Carole has clocked up a record that will never be broken for number of screen hours.
My older sister was terrified of that test card. Turns out she was not the only one. Still freaks her out decades later!
Same here I run away as a kid every time test card was on it was the clown and high pich tone I hated. I love test card music I've got records and cds. . But now asked my boys for the plush toy of bubbles the clown 😂😂 👍
Same!!! The clown is still scary as hell.
Yeah it's definitely the clown that's freaky. I could never figure out why it was so shiny and its body was weird.
I was born in 1966 and was always asking my mum in early 70s who won the game funny never did get an answer??!
It's super creepy and always was
thank you , i can remember as a young apprentice tv engineer in the early 80's timing a delivery or new installation when a customer was very specific that they wanted to see and check your set up with the test card , most were just happy to get a watchable picture but we did deal with some high end customers who could be very demanding , great times happy memories , was lucky enough to meet through my work some great tv personalities my favourite had to be Tony Hart , who lived less than a mile from where i live now , he was never demanding just charming and very welcoming into his home
Brilliant as always. Fun fact about F that I don’t think was mentioned is that the “X” in the game of noughts and crosses is the exact centre of the image 😎. Another bit of design genius from Mr Hersee.
Basically correct. The noughts and crosses was to show static convergence errors but the 'X' was not centralised until TC 'J' came along.
Grea factage Rich
It just isn't though. Anyone can see that.
@@fdfsdfsvsfgsg4888 I just took a measuring tape @ 19:18 and measured it's not it's 6"from the x down 9" from the x up and 9 1/2" side to side
@@michaeldavison9761 Yeah that's right
why does this make me cry? I used to watch this on late sleepless nights in the early to mid 00s in my grandmother's house as I kept the tv on throughout the night to help my fear of sleeping in a Bungalow house (people walking outside) The noise of the testcard amongst 24 hour news was comforting.
As a kid in the 60's I would watch the local (NSW, Australia) test cards waiting for the early morning cartoons to start. I now find old B&W test cards to be fascinating. : )
Thanks for this one Adam, you've done a great job at reminding me how old I am! I live in West Yorkshire and clearly remember our first Decca 14 inch TV arriving in around 1954. Even though I was only 2 at the time, I really do remember. At that time, we got the BBC from Holme Moss on a massive X aerial on the roof of our farmhouse. The next important event I remember is my dad's workmate calling round to ours with his long screwdriver. He was like a wizard as he stuck it into the front of our TV and twiddled it about. When I got older, I realised he was fine-tuning channel 10 to bring in ITV in time for its opening day. The new signal came from Emley Moore. I remember asking my dad's friend if we needed another aerial, and he said the picture was perfect, so the BBC one would do fine. Now, what the heck was a three year old doing, asking if we'd needed a new aerial? I have no idea, but it's true! I'm now 69, and have lived a life full of TV, radio, satellite, and electronics in general. That little black and white picture was the best thing ever, then, oh wow, colour. Now here I am watching a 55 inch TV receive programmes from a satellite some 22,300 miles in space! Who would ever have thought it back then in the 1950s?
Brilliant documentary, possibly your best one. The test card girl is such a timeless image, it’s so simple, but iconic
Thank you so much! Arguable the most iconic television image out there!
@@AdamMartyn Yes, as a _television_ image, it'd be hard to beat. (Some of the shots of the Adele Dixon film perhaps - I covet the "gallons per minute" meter - but Carole probably wins hands down, especially given the internationalness of it.) Actually, even among images that are _not_ specifically to do with television, it's probably pretty high - certainly up there with the Mona Lisa and the Che one, though maybe some of the ones of the late Queen might pip it, because of stamps and currency.
Test card F has always fascinated me yet it still unnerves me whenever I look at it. When I was little it used to TERRIFY me, to the point at which it became my biggest fear 😭 I was born in 2000 and I remember seeing it still in use. I used to avoid watching TV at night in case it came on 🥴
It’s very interesting to me that you still saw it! I’m a few years older than you but I only ever remember seeing “Pages From Ceefax” at night; my first exposure to Test Card F was actually in _Life on Mars._
@@kaitlyn__L they used to occasionally show it on the now defunct channel BBC HD circa 2008/2009 - that’s when I remember seeing it!
@@sundaygirl4299 ahh, that explains it - I never had access to BBC HD, as my family never had satellite, and even convincing for a Freeview box in 2007 was a lot of effort! Perhaps what you saw was Test Card W, then? :)
As a child of the 60’s I remember what seemed like an eternity, sitting in front of the huge tv that had screen doors to hide it as it wasn’t an accepted piece of furniture back then, and watching this test card in black and white waiting for the ten minutes of ‘watch with mother’. It was as boring as the test card but it was all we had. They were not ‘good old days’ , It’s wonderful how technology has moved on and how much entertainment and education our young people have today at the touch of a button.
If you had a TV with doors on it to hide the screen ,when not in use ,you must of been very posh . Most people could only afford to rent a TV back in those days . You also had to bash the TV to steady the picture ,they were wooden boxes full of glass valves .
I think the amount of stuff including easy access to 24 hour social media is the downfall of the younger generations.
Thanks!
lol
As a child I was given a kit to make one of the clowns used in the Testcard. Being fairly young, it certainly didn't look like the one on screen. lol
A great overview! I think my nostalgia quota for the day has been well and truly met! I watched this visually picturing the old family TV sets I saw it on. Thank you for bringing back such warm memories.
Always a pleasure my friend 😊
You're one of those channels that can make a video on something I've never even considered thinking about, like the history of British television, and make me care about it. Wonderful documentary!
Thank you so much pal! 😁 really happy that it got your interest!
Just scanning the airwaves for TV signals on the Dutch coast and then running into Test Card F was always something special. I instantly knew I was recieving something from the UK and it was a nice change of scenery across all of the boring Philips and Telefunken cards locally.
I might really enjoyed that test card F because of that Girl. Even She was older, I will never forget her because of a iconic test card in UK TV History.
Btw, I am not a British user, I am a Venezuelan user. That’s all I can tell.
I was a T.V. engineer in the 70,s and was surrounded by t.v,s in my workshop with this testcard, brilliant peice of artwork and of course all the info that us "repairmen" needed ,we could even "converge the R.G.B. to a degree without using cross hatch generators!..
one true story that I like to tell ,is when "ceefax" came to the BBC, you would have pages and pages of information from the news,weather and even a"todays recipe" page and with all sorts of music for added entertainment,
on this particular morning, I had ceefax running on a test t.v. and "todays recipe" came up,
the recipe was for "lamb hotpot" I laughed so hard when I realised that the music they chose to play for the page was a version of "sheep may safely graze" by mendelson!!! a true story from the late 70,s that I still smile at today,...🤩
Bamboozle was always fun to play.
"They may safely graze... BUT NOT TODAY!"
Yes the noughts and crosses were ideal for convergence checks . Colour sets back then didn't travel well with the older delta tubes . The manufacturer's advised that new TV's were set up in the customer's homes , so we always had a pattern generator and degaussing coil on the van. But you could at a pinch do most of it and get reasonable results with test card F.
Sheep May Safely Graze is by J S Bach if I’m not mistaken.
@@joannedixon-jackson7348 whoops, your right of course..🙄lol....
Thanks for posting…I first remember seeing test card F I believe in 1967 on BBC2, I can remember as a child trying to figure out the different colours by their shading, on our very old Sobell black&white TV😄
I used to love watching pages from Ceefax as we didnt have a Ceefax ready TV. Once we finally got one I was so excited. Playing Bamboozle every morning before school and checking the TV Guide. The simple joys....
I knew the photographer who took the photo of Carol Hersee for the test card. The late David Jones, who worked at the BBC and drank at my local pub in Newdigate, Surrey. A jolly nice chap he was too.
Thanks for the trip down Memory Lane. Great.
That test card was damn useful when you had a tv with basically a clothes hanger sticking out of it for an aerial. Twiddling the tuning knobs and the aerial, trying to get a good enough signal so all the lines would be nice and straight on the test card was a frustrating experience.
I was born in 1972 so grew up with the testcard girl. It would go off air at lunchtime on BBC 2 for play school. If I remember correctly it done a countdown on the test card
As an American I never saw Test card F till I saw Life on Mars. It fascinated me, I had it as my computer wallpaper for a long time.
Wow, Adam has pretty much started pumping out new documentaries almost every 3rd week or every month!
No words... 😄
And a fun fact: your documentaries helped me to get the best marks in English! (I needed to make an infographic - I made 20 facts about BBC)
I feel if I can get at least one out a month then I'm happy with that 💪 also glad to hear the videos helped you! May they continue to! 😊
That’s honestly great! I’m extremely proud of you.
Wow....my childhood passed before my eyes....thank you so very much.....Cheers
What a brilliant documentary!
Thanks Ben!
Another informative piece on how things are different "across the pond". In the US we call it a test pattern, and it was more prevalent when I was growing up. Of course before 24/7 broadcasting stations would play the national anthem at close down, and then it would just be static. Home Box Office (HBO) had a little animation of a man yawning and calling it a night when they would go off the air in the early 1980's.
To be honest I find your test pattern slightly more useful in that it includes an infrablack segment, whereas these test cards seem to only go down to black. Though of course our test cards allow for alignment and convergence testing too all in one go, while your test patterns have different ones for those separate from the colour bars :)
Very rarely remember it on BBC1 but it was up on BBC2 for hours and hours during the day! TV was grim as a kid during the summer holidays in the 1970s. BBC1 had some sport on, BBC2 was the testcard and ITV had some black & white feature film. That was it.
Interesting doc and channel. Takes me back to the 80's as a kid. Only a few decades ago or so but a completely different world
What a wonderful documentary you have created. Thank you!
Thank you for watching it! 😁
Another real quality AMTV documentary - enthusiasm, and accuracy, but no talking-down. Why can't the BBC - or any other channel! - make stuff like this these days (except perhaps where David Attenborough presents)?
This was both a wonderful and sometimes jarring trip down memory lane over 42 years of my life. I have memories of a lot of the images shown being on tv whilst I was getting ready for school and college and even uni for a brief spell. And then work. Such simpler times. Makes me want to move back to Sussex and live on the rural coast again. Thanks for the video man. I’ve subbed for sure.
Excellent thanks
Thanks Andy!
I really enjoyed this video, very interesting, many thanks. Brings back memories
You're very welcome! Happy to bring in the nostalgia 😊
Great vid
I just had to watch it
Back to a time when things were much more simple 👍
a time when things were much more simple, as they should always be. Especially right now.
What a fab video. When I was young, I always mistook the green body of the clown for a shiny green skull! Shows how weird my imagination was!!
The imagination is a wonderful thing! Glad you enjoyed the video!
I remember when they switched to J and it was a rare treat to catch F again. early to mid 90s used to hunt out F at night.
New Zealander here - I remember "Test Card F" well! I'm sure we had exactly the same version as the UK!
I can still remember back when I was in my early teens I would sometimes stay up watching late shows on the TV and quite often fell asleep on the sofa until that high pitched tone would suddenly wake me up. I often thought those four grid things in the corners looked like speakers, heaven knows why. I guess that was my imagination back then as a kid. That clown doll did look terrifying though I will admit. But it's such an iconic image from TV broadcasting back in the day. Another great childhood memory for many of us.
Another amazing documentary, Adam! This is the perfect 1000th video!
Thank you Josh! It did feel quite fitting and right that it should be No. 1000!
Should do one about tv tax
i hope you do more of these doccumentaries. i find this stuff really fascinating. since im 20, and didnt experience things like this, i find these stories really interesting. keep it up!
I'm not sure if another comment has mentioned this, but when BBC 3 was about to return to the air, a modified version of Test Card X had been seen on several test transmissions prior to it launching. The only difference was the "HD" text being in a more standard font, without the diamond surrounding it. Was gutted to have missed these transmissions as I'd have loved to have seen the test card in the flesh. There was also a way you could see it via BBC Red Button, but having tried it recently, it unfortunately no longer works.
Amazing video nonetheless, I learnt a few new things from it
Another perfect documentary Adam, keep em up!!
Thanks so much pal! Really glad you enjoyed it! 😊
Great, I had completely forgotten about the test card f, used it all the time in the 70s and 80s to check quality especially on VCR recording, with the higher frequency gratings showing the capability of any selected machine.
Glad I caught the premiere. Thank you for a great video!
Thank YOU for being at the premiere! Glad you enjoyed it! 😁
Carol holds the record for being the longest person ever to appear on television
Excellent video. Thanks for sharing. I remember seeing both Test card F and the PM5544 Test Card used both here in Australia and also in New Zealamd.
Love this post! Here in the US, We never had a photo image in the Test Pattern, only line scales.
If I can digress a little from the subject, you reminded me about the first experiments in breakfast T. V in Scotland which was a live feed from BBC Radio's 'Good morning Scotland'. It must of made an impact as I remember listening to it avidly whilst getting ready for school.. .. .
Excellent video. Full of information and superbly created. Fantastic 👏👏
Thank you very much Henry! Glad you enjoyed it and found it informative 😁
Hi Adam. Just found your channel and have subscribed. Thanks for the large dose of nostalgia. I was a 70's kid and loved all the different ITV identity logos. Even though I grew up in turbulence times in Belfast , when you're a kid you still lived in a sort of magical time.
Thanks for coming aboard Tom! Always happy to provide good doses of nostalgia 😊
Well, here it is. Congrats on making 1000 videos, man, that is dedication and what a way to celebrate with a long, entertaining and generally interesting documentary! 👏 👏 👏
Thank you so much Hux! Thank you for your support and sticking by the channel!
@@AdamMartyn No problem Adam, I'll be sure to stick around in the future!
Charming well put together video, thank you.
Thank you so much!
Been bingeing your videos all the time at the minute, one of my favourite channels rn!
Thank you! Glad you're enjoying the videos! 😁
Carole had a Mona Lisa smile, an icon for sure!
Fab. Cheers.
I loved the music playing over it and have made many tapes when I was able to either use one of those primative tape recorders or a vhs recorder.
Nowadays the music is available on RUclips.
It was also used in That Mitchell and Webb Look as the emergency broadcast system screen introducing the post-apocalyptic 'Quiz Broadcast' comedy sketches, where the noughts and crosses game was replaced with messages such as "mummy won't wake up"
That girl in the test card is forever embedded into my childhood I was born in 1983 for some reason I remember staring at it late at night.
TCF never bothered me as a child until around late 1982 when Russell Harty had a testcard special on his evening show on BBC2, featuring Jack Douglas, I think it was.
Can't remember exactly what it was that happened, but it creeped the living bejesus out of me, and I was never the same after that...
I did like the Post apocalyptic test card from The Mitchel and webb look. Also, there was a easter egg in one of the lego star wars games showing the test card in lego form.
As a non-brit, that's actually how I first encountered test card F! I stumbled upon some of the post-apocalyptic segments on youtube a few months ago and so that's what it's associated with in my head
I want to see this test card in 4K when the BBC starts to broadcasting in 4K
Superb video. I love how it was used in Life on Mars. Then there's also the hidden test card that used to be on Freeview boxes.
Thank you so much! I never got chance to access the Test Card on the old Freeview box!
@@AdamMartyn It may still work if you can get hold of a really old one.
i love the documentaries!
Thank you! I have a lot of fun making them!
Excellent, 1st class.
Thank you!
Have just done test card artwork, with Rose Tyler holding chalk with a Tardis on the board, dalek instead of clown 🤡 R Instead of F and BAD WOLF replacing BBC TV. Wish I could show it to you, this is excellent video
That sounds ace! If you have Twitter you could shoot it over as a DM?
@@AdamMartyn I don’t unfortunately, and fb has become a dead duck 🦆
Until recently, a version of TC 'W' was available on Freeview through a set of remote control keypad strokes. It was a rather poor resolution version so no real loss. I'm glad I kept a recording of the BBC 1080i TC on my PVR with 5.1 tones.
Yes, I used the Freeview one to make geometry adjustments to a Sony widescreen set after a few of the tube magnets fell off!
Congrats on your thousand video Adam. I grew up seeing the test card, but didn't know anything about it, so your doco was very informative.
Thank you so much! Really glad you enjoyed it! 😁
I'm so sorry I missed the premiere but I love this doc anyway! Excellent job Adam!
Thanks Roger! Glad that you enjoyed it! 😁😁
@@AdamMartyn Thank you Adam!
I suppose what's so strangely eerie about test card F is that it would only appear late at night when I wasn't supposed to be up and it was such a mystery why it existed.
Also, Bubbles the clown was 2spooky4me.
It did used to be shown in the daytime up until the 1980s on BBC1 or 2 when daytime tv arrived so too of course.
You might be interested to know that the testcard shown at 16:05 is not Testcard W, but is an early "we need something..." modified version of F. It's missing the extra arrowheads at the side and has the F version of the picture in the middle with the over saturated clown and with the same framing as F that crops out the clowns hand holding the chalk. The proper version of W (as seen at 15:25) came along a few months after the unofficial wide version of F.
It was known to broadcast 24 hours a day as a hidden channel on Freeview, right up until only a few years ago. You had to go to the BBC red button service, press a complex combination of buttons, then Test Card W would appear. I tried it for myself, it really was available. But looking around, the whole system changed some time after 2014 and nobody now knows how to get it, or if it's even still provided as a hidden feature.
I recently made a Test CARD F recreation and it looks the same as the original. Nice vid btw, I loved it
They were still using Test Card W in the Netherlands some years ago, around 2018. I was in Amsterdam, I did some Amsterdam things, went back to my hotel and fell asleep with the TV on. Woke up at 2am with that bloody tone and that bloody clown that had terrorised me as a kid and nearly bloody screamed.
Quick way to sober up...
Thanks for your videos - like a treasure trove, still working through your back catalogue. Oh and thanks for the credit in your end caps too Adam👍🏽
A pleasure Anthony! Glad you enjoy the videos 😊
Oh my god! Sky Guide! The memories 😂
Fantastic
As a teenager I once saw Test Card F in real life in the early 1980s.
The TV sports series Superstars was being filmed in my town, and at the local swimming pool I saw a TV camera pointed at a large print of the card, propped up like a photo frame.
One interesting feature was that the small black letterbox-shaped rectangle above the photo was actually a cutout hole to a small black box attached to the back of the card.
I assumed that this was a way of ensuring that the rectangle was pure black, avoiding any reflections otherwise present on the printed card.
My main memory of test cards was how they emphasised that many televisions could not properly display even the undemanding 4:3 picture format, usually clipping a fair amount at the sides.
Edit: Corrected 5:4 to 4:3. 5:4 was probably closer to what one often actually got, compared with 4:3 for the transmitted picture.
I remember on early colour sets the picture was massively overscanned such that the centre image was the only part of the tesr card visible in colour. Also the clown's body looked more like a shiny balloon than soft fabric.
NOW, for the audio part of the BBC, I absolutely love David Lowe’s version of the news. It’s very British and full of Royalty. I’m so glad that I bought the limited edition of the CD from the BBC. These days the BBC needs to go back to that theme. So glad that I have a C-Band satellite receiver.
Test card F. Carole Hersee is a legend
She certainly is!
I don't remember the test card girl, as local tv stations used the Philips pattern. I do remember the 1kHz test tone and Ceefax from the couple of times i accidentally pushed the TXT button on the BBC channel (mid-late 90's). This video has cleared some things up for me.
This was so interesting! A great AMTV documentary 🤩👏🏻❤
I'm so glad you found it interesting my love! 😁 thank you for watching ❤
I remember watching this before the kids TV started on a Saturday. I used to swear I'd see her slightly move....
we still have TV close in outback Australia into the late 2000's
Oh man, I remember that Ceefax - it was when I was like 8 or so (2002) and it was like discovering a secret world. There was a specific button on the remote, and 4(?) tabs could be seen, news weather and possibly a catalogue? No idea about the fourth. That… sent me back.
Thanks for including New Zealand Mate!!