Telefunken FuBK


The Telefunken FuBK is an electronic analogue television test card developed by AEG-Telefunken and Bosch Fernseh in West Germany as the successor to the monochrome T05 test card in the late-1960s and used with analogue 625-lines PAL broadcasts.
Not as popular as the Philips PM5544, nevertheless it saw widespread use in West Germany and some other European, Asian, South American and African countries, and by a few commercial TV stations in Australia.

Physical equipment

The test card was generated electronically by several video-signal generators, including two variations of the Philips PM5644 generator and the Rohde & Schwarz SGPF-B3. It has also been used in conjunction with digital broadcasts by means of the PT5300 from ProTeleVision/DK Technologies.

Test card features

Some elements present on the FuBK test card are:
On PAL broadcasts, with a maximum displayable video bandwidth of around 5 MHz, individual lines should just be visible in all Multiburst gratings. In other situations, like a VHS recording with reduced bandwidth, they become more and more indistinct, merging into a grey area.
The two special achromatic fields should be displayed as grey if PAL decoding is functioning correctly. If not, colour will be seen on these areas, as shown in the off-air screen capture of ARD Das Erste test card, visible on the "Usage Gallery" at the end of this article.

Variations

4:3

  • A variation simply omitted the centre circle. This variation is also anecdotally called "Simplified FuBK".
  • Another variation adds a second set of colour bars and flips the middle downward triangle. This was used by IRIB in Iran.
  • Another variation that adds border castellations and changes the middle downward triangle to a simple vertical bar, used by Kanal 2 in Denmark, Rupavahini in Sri Lanka, Televerket Kabel-TV in Sweden and on some German channels. Used with further modifications and added graphics by al-Jamahiriya TV.
  • Another modification, again omitting the circle but including a grid cross in the middle and slightly different resolution gratings, was known to be used on some TV transmitters in Belgium and the Netherlands.
  • A monochrome variant, omitting the centre circle and replacing the colour bars with a black box showing the transmitter name and channel, as well as an on-screen line gauge replacing the ±V/ +U Ramp and +V/ ±U Anti PAL sections near the bottom, was used on some DBP-operated TV transmitters in West Germany in the 1970s.
  • While not exactly a variant, the Grundig VG 1001 pattern features many of the FuBK test elements, like the colour and grey bars, PAL check area and gratings. This allows it to be used to perform the same adjustments. This pattern was used by a few channels like BRT, SDR, Polsat, MVQ-6, at the headends of many Finnish cable TV providers, on experimental satellite test transmissions involving the Orbital Test Satellite in the early-1980s, as well as on point-to-point cable and satellite feeds in the UK, France, Austria, Italy, Germany, Luxembourg and Belgium. A heavily modified version of the VG 1001 pattern was used for SECAM transmissions by Bulgarian National Television during People's Republic of Bulgaria era and also later in PAL by NOVA from its launch in 1994.

    16:9

In the 1990s, a FuBK variant in the 16:9 aspect ratio format was developed for the PALplus and MAC standards and was used by some channels such as ARD. Crosshatch was changed to a 25x15 grid, and geometric markings for the central 4:3 safe area were included, with the other details being generally the same as on the original version. This pattern could be generated by the Grundig VG 1100 video generator, introduced around 1995 as well as the PM5644/86 and the digital PT5300 from DK Technologies.

Usage

This pattern was used by many broadcasters, including:
The Telefunken FuBK test card is featured in the 2016 Finnish indie video game My Summer Car, which the player's television sets in his house and in the in-game town's jail would show during the in-game overnight broadcast break. This was done to mimic the Finnish public broadcaster YLE's test card, which was used from the 1970s until the 2000s.