Comparison of Game Consoles by Sound Capabilities: Difference between revisions

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The purpose of this article is to categorize video game consoles according to their supported audio formats, and to consolidate advice on optimizing sound reproduction for each of those consoles.[[Category:Main]]
When it comes to retro gaming, many enthusiasts tend to focus on graphics and gameplay, but sound can be just as important in creating an immersive experience. From the humble beep of the first video game console to the modern-day surround sound systems, sound capabilities have come a long way in video game consoles. This article aims to provide an overview of the various sound formats and standards used in video game consoles, from mono to stereo and beyond, as well as to offer tips and recommendations for getting the best sound performance out of each console. By comparing the sound capabilities of different consoles, players can make informed decisions on how to optimize their gaming experience.


{{Warning|DRAFT (WORK IN PROGRESS ARTICLE - PLEASE DO NOT RELY ON THE INFORMATION BELOW UNTIL MARKED AS COMPLETED)}}  
{{Warning|DRAFT (WORK IN PROGRESS ARTICLE - PLEASE DO NOT RELY ON THE INFORMATION BELOW UNTIL MARKED AS COMPLETED)}}  


<ref>https://shmup.fandom.com/wiki/Tate_Mode</ref><ref>https://www.doesitflip.com/</ref><ref>https://shmups.system11.org/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=60868</ref><ref>https://store.steampowered.com/curator/14416124/</ref><ref>https://retronauts.com/article/946/the-comprehensive-list-of-flip-grip-friendly-vertical-games-for-switch</ref><ref>http://www.gamepilgrimage.com/content/games-tate-mode-standard-definition</ref><ref>https://www.reddit.com/r/NintendoSwitch/comments/85fqso/list_of_switch_games_that_support_nonstandard/</ref>.


==Explanation of Terms==
==Explanation of "Channels"==


'''''Console:'''''
If you’re putting together a console setup for audio, there are some numbers that you’ll notice like 2.1, 5.1, 7.2.2 and so on. These numbers represent "channels", with each channel normally - but not always - corresponding to one physical speaker. (For example, there are plenty of exceptions such as soundbars and surround-sound headsets, so "channels" and "speakers" are not synonymous. While 2.1 might seem to indicate three separate speakers, this may not always be the case).
* The first number (for example, the "5" in a 5.1 setup) defines how many primary channels there are in a setup, at ear level. Usually (but again, not always) this number also refers to the number of regular speakers in the setup. So for example, a standard 5.1 system will normally use five speakers: Front Left, Centre, Front Right, Surround Left and Surround Right. Each channel can receive a separate audio signal. So if the user is playing a game that has its audio mixed in 5.1 surround, the dialogue will probably be sent to the centre speaker, with the other speakers playing audio relative to the action on the screen. This will hopefully add greater immersion and give a more convincing experience.


An asterisk symbol (`*`) beside a console's name means that a Triad brand replacement power supply is available for that console. See the [[AV:Triad Power Supplies|Triad Power Supplies]] page for more information.
*The second number stands for the number of LFE (Low Frequency Effects) channels in a setup, which are commonly reproduced by subwoofer speakers. The woofers on regular speakers are not usually powerful enough to effectively reproduce very low-frequency bass sounds. So having the second number displayed separately (for example, the "1" in a 5.1 setup) indicates that this is not a normal speaker. For extra bass, some systems might even support x.2 or even x.4 speaker configurations.
* The third number (for example, the last "2" in a modern 7.2.2 home theatre setup) is a relatively new innovation, and defines how many overhead or height channels there are, which are normally reproduced by ceiling-mounted or in-ceiling speakers. If your system has a third number, this indicates that it supports object-based surround sound formats such as Dolby Atmos or DTS:X, where sounds are recorded as individual objects in 3D space instead of traditional channels. However, it's not strictly necessary for an object-based setup to have actual ceiling speakers. Some standard speakers (or soundbars) have built-in upward-firing speakers that bounce audio off the ceiling, to simulate the effect that the audio is actually coming from above you.


'''''Voltage:'''''
Analog multichannel sound can be implemented as:
* a '''discrete''' system, where each channel is delivered independently; (''for example, a 5.1 system with 5 or 6 RCA connectors is, at least at that point in the chain, a discrete system'')
or
* a '''matrixed''' system, where algorithms are used to put multiple channels worth of sound into a lesser amount of physical channels (such as the two stereo RCA cables that were already commonly in use with most audio equipment from the 1970s through to the 1990s)


Generally speaking, the "Voltage" figure on the power supply should match the official specs (below) as closely as possible. There will be exceptions to this rule, and they will be highlighted in the "Notes" column.  
In digital audio, these terms are less commonly used, but comparable approaches are used depending on circumstances.


'''''Amps:'''''
==Disclaimer==


As amperage refers to potential current (and the device will only draw as much as required) - the A (or the mA) figure may be higher than what the console requires to operate, but should not be lower.  
This article is written with the intention of providing practical advice and tips to the average retro gamer who wishes to improve their console audio experience. While accuracy and up-to-date information are essential, the article is not meant to be excessively technical or comprehensive.


The figures below do not account for additional power draw caused by various modifications, flashcart devices, wireless controllers or similar after-market additions.
For example, in the context of video game consoles, the term "mono" typically refers to the console's output being a single, mixed audio channel, as opposed to true monophonic sound. For instance, the original Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) is sometimes referred to as a "mono" console, despite featuring two pulse wave channels, one triangle wave channel, one noise channel, and a delta modulation channel. Similarly, the ColecoVision used a SN76489 sound chip, which offered four channels, including three tone channels for music and a noise channel.


'''''Polarity:'''''
While channels can be utilized in combination to create complex sounds and music, the output is merged into a single channel. Describing these consoles as anything other than "mono" might confuse the average user, who might assume that adding additional speakers would enhance their audio setup. Therefore, unless a console can output audio in stereo, it will be regarded as a "mono" console.


The power supply's connector can be center-positive (C+) or center-negative (C-). They can be distinguished by the symbols which can be found, usually either on the power brick, or on the plug.  
{| class="wikitable"|-
!align="left"|
! Sound System
!align="left"| Year Introduced to Home Market
!align="left"| Explanation
!align="left"| Use in Retro-Gaming context
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Mono_sound_logo.png|100px]]
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| 1899
|align="left"| “Monaural sound” is simply a single audio channel. A mono signal can be sent from the source device to one, two or many speakers, and all the speakers will play the same sound regardless. While stereo signals can create the impression of hearing sounds from different locations/directions, mono cannot.
|align="left"| Prior to the Turbo-Grafx16, all home video game consoles <ref>https://forum.digitpress.com/forum/showthread.php?24851-The-first-home-video-game-system-with-stereo-sound-was</ref> either sent a mono audio signal to the television, or (in the 1st gen) utilised beepers and built-in speakers to produce simple action sounds. In some instances, stereo mods for these older consoles are available. (e.g. Atari 2600) <ref>https://forums.atariage.com/topic/199461-atari-2600-stereo-mod/</ref>


In some modern consoles, the ability to enable mono audio (i.e. combining all audio channels into one) can be enabled as an accessibility option for players with single-sided deafness. <ref>https://support.xbox.com/en-IE/help/account-profile/accessibility/listen-in-mono#:~:text=On%20an%20Xbox%20console&text=Press%20the%20Xbox%20button%20%EE%8F%A3,and%20then%20select%20Mono%20output.</ref>
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Stereo-Audio-Sound-Signal-Round.png|100px]]
|align="left"| Stereo
|align="left"| 1958
|align="left"| While mono signals are recorded and played back using a single audio channel, stereo sounds are recorded and played back using two discrete audio channels.


<div class="white-background"> [[File:Polarity symbol.png|200px]] </div>
Stereo speaker setups are usually laid out in either a 2.0 (no subwoofer) or a 2.1 (with subwoofer) configuration - with a front left speaker and a front right speaker. 
|align="left"| Since its introduction with the Turbo-Grafx 16 <ref>https://forum.digitpress.com/forum/showthread.php?24851-The-first-home-video-game-system-with-stereo-sound-was</ref>, Stereo is still the way that the majority of gamers experience sound in video games, although soundbars and surround sound headphones are projected to continue growing in popularity. 
|-
|align="left"| [[File:512px-Qs-r4-channel-stereo.svg.png|100px]]
|align="left"| Quadrophonic Sound
|align="left"| 1971
|align="left"| This format had brief popularity in the 1970s, using two front and two rear speakers (all discrete channels). Most quadrophonic musical recordings were extracted from the original stereo mix, although some were mastered in four channels.
|align="left"| Early Playstation 3 units (CECHA/B/C/E) are capable of reading Super Audio CDs (SACDs) which support Quadraphonic sound <ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AcBO3wHwdWE&t=1172s</ref>. Regular SACD players with multichannel analogue outputs have been confirmed to be compatible with 1970s quadrophonic receivers, <ref name=":0">https://www.quadraphonicquad.com/forums/threads/playing-sacds-with-quad-receivers-buying-sacds.27674/</ref>, although whether the PS3 supports this method of output has not been confirmed.


''Centre-positive symbol''
No confirmed use of quadrophonic sound in the audio mixes of any actual video games. By the time game consoles were beginning to move away from use of piezo beepers and built-in speakers, in favour of actually sending audio to the television for output (e.g. the Atari 2600 in 1977), quadrophonic sound had already faded from the mainstream.
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Dolby_Stereo_Logo.png|100px]]
|align="left"| Dolby Stereo
|align="left"| 1975
|align="left"| Dolby Stereo was developed in the 1970s for cinema sound systems, and was later adapted for the home as "Dolby Surround". <ref>https://entertainment.time.com/2013/09/16/how-did-dolby-sound-change-the-movies/</ref>
|align="left"| N/A - See Dolby Surround.
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Headphones_logo.png|100px]]
|align="left"| Binaural Audio
|align="left"| 1978
|align="left"| Binaural sound is a technique that involves recording audio (usually using two microphones) in such a way that when the user listens to it back, it produces a 3D effect from the stereo signal. The effect arguably works best when listened to using a pair of noise-cancelling headphones.


Although binaural recording techniques have existed since the 1800s, it wasn't until 1978 that Lou Reed released the first commercially produced binaural pop record, "Street Hassle". <ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_Hassle</ref>
|align="left"| When done correctly, the effect works very well with headphones and VR-based systems (such as Playstation VR).


<div class="white-background"> [[File:Centre negative.png|200px]] </div>
The technique has also been used in certain games for the PSP and 3DS - for example, the dialogue in Corpse Party and Book of Shadows were both recorded using binaural recording. <ref>https://www.reddit.com/r/vita/comments/2spzqk/dont_play_corpse_party_in_the_dark_with_headphones/</ref>
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Yesterday_spectral_uncompressed.png|100px]]
|align="left"| LPCM (Linear Pulse Code Modulation)
|align="left"| 1982
|align="left"| Not a brand of sound format - LPCM refers to raw, uncompressed sound data. LPCM can support any number of potential audio channels, from mono upwards.


''Centre-negative symbol''
LPCM's first home implementation was the lossless encoding of sound data in Audio CDs. <ref>https://www.loc.gov/preservation/digital/formats/fdd/fdd000011.shtml</ref>
|align="left"| The PlayStation 3 was first console to offer real-time 7.1 LPCM as an option for sound. Any modern AVR or pre-amp should be able to process these signals, but LPCM cannot be used for object-based sound. <ref>https://www.ps3blog.net/about/ps3-specs//</ref>
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Dolby_Surround_Logo.png|100px]]
|align="left"| Dolby Surround
|align="left"| 1982
|align="left"| Dolby Surround (i.e. "matrixed surround") was the first multi-channel surround decoding technology to be widely available for use with analogue movie formats and to a lesser extent, home video game consoles.


The format produces four audio channels (Left Front, Right Front, Centre and a single rear surround channel), but they're not discrete. The channels are extracted using a specially encoded signal that runs across the existing two stereo (red and white) RCA cables that were in use with a lot of customer audio equipment of this era.
|align="left"| In short, the user gets a centre, a front left and right and mono rear.


To avoid damage to the console, the user should inspect the symbol on their power supply and ensure that its [https://itp.nyu.edu/physcomp/lessons/electronics/understanding-dc-power-supplies/ polarity] matches the polarity of the corresponding console (see table below).  
To access 4.0 surround (i.e., four channels), the user would need an AV amplifier capable of decoding and separating the regular stereo outputs to produce the pseudo-surround sound effect. Discrete left and right sounds  still go to the Front Left and Front Right speakers, as per normal Stereo. However, the processor uses one of the front channels to carry a mono rear channel on its inverted phase - there maybe be two or more Rear surround speakers, the mono sound is played equally between them all at the same time. The other front channel is used to carry a centre channel on its inverted phase.  


If the user’s amplifier could send audio signals below a certain frequency to a subwoofer (using a low-pass filter), the user also could access 4.1 surround. A setup like this would also be backwards-compatible with older formats – if the user had a regular 2.0 stereo setup, the Left and Right signals would play as normal, and if the console was plugged into an older CRT with a mono speaker, all the audio would be routed into that single channel.
|-
|align="left"| [[File:THX_logo.png|100px]]
|align="left"| THX
|align="left"| 1983
|align="left"| THX is not its own sound format, but rather a rigid set of standards, originally intended to ensure that the theatrical experience of a movie was as close as possible to the director's intentions.


'''''Original PN:'''''
In the realm of home consumer hardware and VHS/DVDs/video games, THX certification signified that the mastering and duplication process was inspected by THX technicians and held to certain standards. 
|align="left"| Approximately 40 games were THX certified, mainly on the PlayStation 2, original XBox, Gamecube, PlayStation 3 and PC. <ref>https://thx.fandom.com/wiki/List_of_THX_Certified_Video_Games</ref>
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Dolby-Surround-Pro-Logic_1.png|100px]]
|align="left"| Dolby Pro Logic 1
|align="left"| 1987
|align="left"| While Dolby Surround added a mono surround channel to the usual front left and front right - this was improved with Dolby Pro Logic 1, which added a centre channel, and used a more advanced algorithm to extract the extra channels, as well as improving the movement and discreteness between them.
|align="left"| Note: *** Did Dolby Surround or Dolby Pro Logic 1 introduce the centre channel? TBC *** Also TBC - did any consoles explicitly support Pro Logic 1, or for our purposes, does Dolby Surround = Dolby Pro Logic 1?
|-
|align="left"| [[File:QSound_Labs_logo.png|100px]]
|align="left"| QSound
|align="left"| 1991
|align="left"| QSound is a format that provides greater separation between sound sources in a stereo mix, producing a kind of "fake" surround sound effect using only two speakers. The effect is built into the recording not the decoding, so all that is needed to access QSound is a stereo-capable receiver with two outputs. <ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vI9UUjrpNVs&t=388s</ref>
|align="left"| According to Andrew Elmore (medium.com)<ref>https://medium.com/@AndrewElmore/did-you-know-these-retro-game-consoles-are-capable-of-surround-sound-70336b760252</ref> , QSound is utilised on several PlayStation games and is the only 3D audio option employed on the Sega Mega CD, Saturn, and Dreamcast. QSound is a boon to Sega gamers as less than 20 games are confirmed to have used actual multi-channel Dolby Surround sound. <ref>https://segaretro.org/Dolby_Surround#Dreamcast</ref>
|-
|align="left"| [[File:RSS_Logo.png|100px]]
|align="left"| Roland Surround Space
|align="left"| 1991
|align="left"| A 3D "sound space" technology created by Roland Corporation (similar to QSound), which attempts to create a "3D sound" using two regular speakers in a stereo configuration.


The part number for the original stock power supply for a given console.  
It does not use speakers which "surround" the user, but attempts to direct sound around the room to give the illusion of depth.
|align="left"| RSS was used in some video games of the early 1990s, but was less successful than competitors such as QSound or Dolby Surround (which were themselves a relative niche market) From a Sega perspective, it was supported by a couple of Mega CD games and less than a dozen Mega LD games. <ref>https://segaretro.org/Roland_Sound_Space</ref>
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Dolby-Digital.png|100px]]
|align="left"| Dolby Digital (originally Dolby Stereo Digital)
|align="left"| 1992
|align="left"| As technology progressed, it became easier to record multi-channel sound natively. Dolby Digital featured 6 discrete channels of audio in the ubiquitous 5.1 setup (5 speakers, 1 subwoofer). 
|align="left"| The first video game console to use 5.1 Dolby Digital encoding was the original Xbox, which was released by Microsoft in 2001. The Xbox was the first console to feature an optical digital audio output, which allowed for high-quality digital audio output, including support for Dolby Digital 5.1 surround sound. Many Xbox games took advantage of this capability, offering immersive and detailed sound design that helped to enhance the gaming experience. <ref>https://www.techradar.com/news/gaming/consoles/gaming-audio-101-everything-you-need-to-know-about-surround-sound-1292323</ref>
|-
|align="left"| [[File:1280px-DTS_logo.png|100px]]
|align="left"| DTS Digital Surround
|align="left"| 1993
|align="left"| The original DTS system was a CD-based digital sound format that synced the compressed audio on a CD with whatever video frame was on-screen at a given time.  


The theatrical version did not feature a discrete subwoofer, with a low-pass filter being applied to the surround channels instead and the subwoofer extracted from them. The home version however offered true 5.1 channel audio, with a discrete subwoofer.
|align="left"| Sony's PlayStation 3 and Microsoft's Xbox 360 are capable of DTS decoding and output via TOSLINK or HDMI as LPCM. However, HDMI output on the Xbox 360 is only found on the "Elite" model and newer models available since mid-2007, with the release of the Zephyr motherboard revision. Also, the Xbox 360 cannot decode DTS from DTS audio CDs.


'''''Replacement PN:'''''
PlayStation 3 consoles can bitstream DTS over HDMI, but cannot decode audio from DTS audio CDs. The newer "slim" models are able to bitstream DTS-HD MA as well, but also cannot decode audio from DTS CDs. ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DTS%20(company) Link]) (Note: need to confirm that the version of DTS applied on the PS3 is same as Jurassic Park in 1993).
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Dts-es_logo.png|100px]]
|align="left"| DTS: ES
|align="left"| 1999
|align="left"| DTS: ES came out at the same time as Dolby Surround EX in the theatres and processed the centre surround in the same way (Note: expand on this)
|align="left"| Confirmed supported on PS3 and Xbox 360 (expand on this)
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Dolby_Pro_Logic_II.png|100px]]
|align="left"| Dolby Pro Logic 2
|align="left"| 2000
|align="left"| Similar to Pro Logic 1 but with the addition of stereo surround channels. Better processing is taking place that tells the surround channels how to steer the sound around the user.
|align="left"| Pro Logic II systems also feature a mode designed specifically for video gaming, and was frequently used in game titles for Sony's PlayStation 2, Nintendo's GameCube and Wii as an alternative to digital surround formats such as Dolby Digital, or DTS. Game mode is similar to Movie mode, except it redirects more bass to the LFE channel. ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dolby%20Pro%20Logic link])
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Dts_neo_6_logo.png|100px]]
|align="left"| DTS Neo:6
|align="left"| 2000
|align="left"| From an analog perspective, DTS Neo-6 replicated what Dolby Pro Logic 2 accomplished from a stereo connection (expand)
|align="left"| TBC - Neo:6 may not require a given console to explicitly "support" it, as this is a post-processing format. https://www.quora.com/What-is-DTS-Neo-6
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Dolby-Pro-Logic-IIx.png|100px]]
|align="left"| Dolby Pro Logic IIx
|align="left"| 2003
|align="left"| Can take two-channel stereo, Dolby Surround, and Dolby Digital 5.1 source material and then upscale it to 6.1 or 7.1 channel surround sound.
|align="left"| TBC - is this another post-processing format? Couldn't find any consoles incorporating Dolby Pro Logic IIx signal processing.
|-
|align="left"| [[File:DTSHD_High_Definition_Audio_logo.jpg|100px]]
|align="left"| DTS-HD High Definition Audio
|align="left"| 2004
|align="left"| This was DTS's equivalent of Dolby Digital Plus.
|align="left"| Confirmed supported by PS3 (expand!)
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Dts-interactive-logo.png|100px]]
|align="left"| DTS Interactive
|align="left"| 2005
|align="left"| DTS (DTS Interactive) had a four-channel format for the home that used Left, Right, Left Surround, and Right Surround speakers.
|align="left"| This was the only discrete format (beyond Stereo) that the PS2 could process in real time, and a few games used this.
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Dolby_TrueHD.png|100px]]
|align="left"| Dolby TrueHD
|align="left"| 2006
|align="left"| Continued improvement to the number of channels as well as maximum bit-rate and sample-rate. (confirm!) Unlike most audio formats, Dolby TrueHD is 100 percent lossless. This means that what you hear is bit-for-bit identical to the master recording.
|align="left"| Confirmed to be supported by PS3 (more details TBC)
|-
|align="left"| [[File:DTS-HD.png|100px]]
|align="left"| DTS-HD Master Audio
|align="left"| 2007
|align="left"| This was DTS' equivalent to Dolby's TrueHD, and was also a lossless format.
|align="left"| Confirmed to be supported by PS3 (more details TBC)
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Dolby_Pro_Logic_IIz.png|100px]]
|align="left"| Dolby Pro Logic IIz
|align="left"| 2009
|align="left"| Expands on Pro Logic IIx with the addition of a height component, creating front height channels above the front left and right speakers, expanding a 5.1 or 7.1 system to 7.1 Height or 9.1. It identifies spatial cues in low-level, uncorrelated information, such as ambience and effects like rain or wind in the side and rear surround channels, and directs it to the front height speakers. The channels it adds are matrixed, not discrete. ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dolby%20Pro%20Logic link])
|align="left"| ?
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Dts_neo_x_logo.png|100px]]
|align="left"| DTS Neo:X
|align="left"| 2009
|align="left"| Replicates what Dolby Pro Logic 2z accomplished from a stereo connection (expand!)
|align="left"| TBC
|-
|align="left"| [[File:Dolby_Atmos_logo.png|100px]]
|align="left"| Dolby Atmos
|align="left"| 2014
|align="left"| Dolby Atmos supports up to 128 audio objects (i.e. sounds) that are independent of a channel assignment. Sounds can be created independently and mapped to an exact specific location. The user can hear a spatially-accurate sound effect, no matter where they are sitting in the room. Dolby Atmos can use up to 24 independent speaker locations plus a subwoofer, and typically uses overhead speakers.
|align="left"| The first console to have Dolby Atmos enabled (via a downloadable app) was the Xbox One (more detail TBC)
|-
|align="left"| [[File:DTS_X_B%26W.png|100px]]
|align="left"| DTS:X
|align="left"| 2015
|align="left"| DTS:X is DTS’s take on Dolby Atmos and uses object-based sounds and height channels in the same fashion as Dolby Atmos.
|align="left"| Confirmed supported by XBox One (expand!)
|}


The part number for the recommended replacement power supply for that console.
==Speaker Layouts==


 
{| class="wikitable"|-
'''''Connection:'''''
! Speaker Layout
 
!align="left"| Diagram
 
|-
 
|align="left"| No speakers (blank template)
'''''Power Supply:'''''
|align="left"| [[File:Floorplan.jpg|100px]]
 
|-
Note that if the "Power Supply" column says "Internal", then that particular console has an internal power supply module that will perform a similar function to the external "power bricks" used by most retro consoles. If your console's power supply is "internal", the user just needs to find a cable that has the correct electrical plug for your region and also has the matching console-facing connector. This will often be a Figure-8 cable, but a guide to common connectors can be found [https://www.lindy.co.uk/iec-connector-cable-guide-i472 here] and on the IEC 60320 [https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEC_60320 Wikipedia page]. The user should also ensure that the console's internal power supply is rated for the AC coming out of their wall. If your console's internal power supply does not match your country's AC voltage (for example, a North American gamer using a European Dreamcast), then step-up/step-down transformers to go up/down in voltage for the target device may be a good option.  
|align="left"| 1.0
 
|align="left"| [[File:Mono_layout.jpg|100px]]
 
|-
'''''Notes:'''''
|align="left"| 2.0
 
|align="left"| [[File:Stereo_layout.jpg|100px]]
Any exceptions to the above guidelines, or idiosyncrasies related to an individual console, should be laid out in the "Notes" column. For example, there are exceptions to the rule that voltage on a replacement should be as close as possible to the voltage on the original power supply. The Sega Genesis for instance, uses a 7805 voltage regulator to step the input down from 9V to 5V. The 7805 expects a minimum voltage of 6.5V - the significance of this is that a Genesis 2 (whose original power supply outputs 10V) will work fine with a 9V power supply.
|-
|align="left"| 2.1
|align="left"| [[File:Stereo_layout_with_subwoofer.jpg|100px]]
|-
|align="left"| 3.1
|align="left"| [[File:3.1_setup.jpg|100px]]
|-
|align="left"| 4.0 (Dolby Surround)
|align="left"| [[File:Dolby_Surround_4.0.jpg|100px]]
|-
|align="left"| 5.1
|align="left"| IMAGE TBC
|-
|align="left"| 6.1
|align="left"| IMAGE TBC
|-
|align="left"| 7.1
|align="left"| IMAGE TBC
|-
|align="left"| 7.2
|align="left"| IMAGE TBC
|-
|align="left"| 7.1.2
|align="left"| IMAGE TBC
|-
|align="left"| 9.1
|align="left"| IMAGE TBC
|-
|align="left"| 9.1.2
|align="left"| IMAGE TBC
|-
|align="left"| 10.2
|align="left"| IMAGE TBC
|-
|align="left"| 13.1
|align="left"| IMAGE TBC
|}


==First generation of consoles==
==First generation of consoles==
Line 67: Line 269:
! Console
! Console
!align="left"| Pictures
!align="left"| Pictures
!align="left"| Voltage
!align="left"| Year of Release
!align="left"| Amps
!align="left"| Audio Hardware
!align="left"| Polarity
!align="left"| Supported Audio Formats
!align="left"| Original PN
!align="left"| Supported Speaker Layouts
!align="left"| Replacement PN
!align="left"| Connection
!align="left"| Power Supply
!align="left"| Notes
!align="left"| Notes
|-
|-
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey Mods Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey]]
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey Mods Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey]]
|align="right"|[[File:Magnavox_Odyssey.png|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Magnavox_Odyssey.png|200px]]
|align="left"| Output: 9V DC
|align="left"| 1972
|align="left"| 400 mA
|align="left"| None
|align="left"| Tip positive
|align="left"| N/A
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| N/A
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| The console cannot generate audio.  
|align="left"| 2.5 mm TS jack
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Odyssey can be powered by six "C" cell batteries, or an Atari 2600 power adapter with a 3.5-to-2.5 mm tip adapter
|-
|-
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 100]]
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 100]]
|align="right"|[[File:Magnavox odyssey 100.jpg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:S-l1600.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| Output: 9V DC
|align="left"| 1975
|align="left"| 200 mA
|align="left"| Piezzo beeper (Built-in speaker)
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| PIDB-15
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| The console didn't send audio to the tv, instead using an internal piezzo beeper which emitted primitive action sounds through a built-in speaker - for example, a "blip" when the tennis ball is hit by a player's paddle, or when the hockey puck hits the borders of the playing area.  
|align="left"| 3.5 mm TS jack
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Console is powered by either six "C" batteries or a 9V AC adapter.
|-
|-
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 200]]
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 200]]
|align="right"|[[File:Magnavox-Odyssey-200-power-supply.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:S-l1600_(1).jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V AC
|align="left"| 1975
|align="left"| 100ma
|align="left"| Piezzo beeper (Built-in speaker)
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| The console's piezo beeper operated in the same manner as the Odyssey 100. The Odyssey 200 added an extra game called SMASH (i.e. squash); the buzzer would bleep whenever the ball hit the front "wall".
|align="left"| ?
|align=“Left”| ?
|align="left"| Console is powered by either six "C" batteries or a 9 volt AC adapter.
|-
|-
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 300]]
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 300]]
|align="right"|[[File:Odyssey-300.jpg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Odyssey-300.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V DC
|align="left"| 1976
|align="left"| 100ma
|align="left"| G.I. AY-3-8500 chip (Built-in speaker)
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| As before, during play, a different audio tone (little more than a few bleeps and bloops) is generated each time the ball hits a player, a wall, or a point is scored. No provisions are made to turn the sound on or off, which emanates from a speaker in the Odyssey console itself.  
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Console is powered by either six "C" batteries or a 9 volt AC adapter.
|-
|-
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 400]]
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 400]]
|align="right"|[[File: Odyssey 400 power supply.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:S-l1600_(2).jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V DC
|align="left"| 1976
|align="left"| 100ma
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Console is powered by either six "C" batteries or a 9 volt AC adapter.
|-
|-
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 500]]
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 500]]
|align="right"|[[File:Magnavox-Odyssey-500-power-supply.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Odyssey500.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| Output 9 volts
|align="left"| 1976
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Console is powered by either six "C" batteries or a 9 volt AC adapter.
|-
|-
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 4305]]
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 4305]]
|align="right"|[[File:Odyssey_4305_(1_of_8).JPG|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Odyssey_4305_(1_of_8).JPG|200px]]
|align="left"| 1976/1977
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| 701479-4 (AC/DC Power Assembly)
|align="left"| The Odyssey 4305 is a 19” television (based on the chassis of the Magnavox T991 television) but with a built-in Odyssey. As with most CRTs of this era, the sound was an analog signal produced from small speakers installed inside the chassis. It produced sound in mono and action sounds were similar to other Odyssey series consoles.  
|align="left"| Unknown
|align="left"| Internal/Chassis-mounted
|align="left"| Internal/Chassis-mounted
|align="left"| The Odyssey 4305 is a 19” television (based on the chassis of the Magnavox T991 television) but with a built-in Odyssey. The device uses a chassis-mounted isolation transformer with no external brick (standard plug coming out the back).  
|-
|-
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 2000]]
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 2000]]
|align="right"|[[File:Magnavox-Odyssey-2000-FL.jpg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Magnavox-Odyssey-2000-FL.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| 1977
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Console is powered by either six "C" batteries or a 9 volt AC adapter.
|-
|-
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 3000]]
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 3000]]
|align="right"|[[File:Magnavox-Odyssey-3000-power-supply.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Magnavox_Odyssey_3000.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9 volts
|align="left"| 1977
|align="left"| 78mA
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Console is powered by either six "C" batteries or a 9 volt AC adapter.
|-
|-
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 4000]]
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 4000]]
|align="right"|[[File:Magnavox_Odyssey_4000.jpg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Magnavox_Odyssey_4000.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V DC
|align="left"| 1977
|align="left"| 100 mA
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Unlike most Odyssey models, the AC adapter is necessary as the console does not use batteries.
|-
|-
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Philips Odyssey 200]]
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Philips Odyssey 200]]
|align="right"|[[File:Philips_ODYSSEY200_Konsole.jpg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Philips_ODYSSEY200_Konsole.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| 1976 (released concurrently with U.S. Odyssey 200)
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| European release of Magnavox Odyssey 200. Unclear if batteries can be used (TBC)
|-
|-
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Philips Odyssey 2001]]
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Philips Odyssey 2001]]
|align="right"|[[File:Philips_Odyssey_2001.png|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Philips_Odyssey_2001.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 18,6V-
|align="left"| 1977
|align="left"| 120mA
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| FW3009
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Unlike most Odyssey models, the AC adapter is necessary as the console does not use batteries.
|-
|-
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Philips Odyssey 2100]]
| [[Odyssey:Odyssey_Series_Wiki|Philips Odyssey 2100]]
|align="right"|[[File:Philips_Odyssey_2100.jpg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Philips_Odyssey_2100.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| 1978
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Unlike most Odyssey models, the AC adapter is necessary as the console does not use batteries.
|-
|-
| TV Tennis Electrotennis (Epoch)
| TV Tennis Electrotennis (Epoch)
|align="right"|[[File:Epoch-electrotennis-battery-compartment.png|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:TV_Tennis_Electrotennis.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| 1975
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Console is completely wireless; powered by four D size batteries.
|-
|-
| Atari Home Pong (Model C-100)
| Atari Home Pong (Model C-100)
|align="right"|[[File:Atari-Home-Pong-power-options.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:S-l1600_(3).jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| 5.5V DC
|align="left"| 1976
|align="left"| 100 mA
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| 004720
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| External PSU
|align="left"| Console can be powered by four "D"-size batteries, or an AC adapter (“battery eliminator”)
|-
|-
| Atari Super Pong (Model C-140)
| Atari Super Pong (Model C-140)
|align="right"|[[File:Ataripong.jpg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:S-l1600 (4).jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 6V DC
|align="left"| 1976
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| The console had a speaker built into the main unit, that could output a simple "bloop" noise every time the ball was hit.
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| External Power Supply Unit (6V)
|align="left"| Console can be powered by four "D"-size batteries, or an AC adapter (“battery eliminator”)
|-
|-
| Coleco Telstar
| Coleco Telstar
|align="right"|[[File:Original-Coleco-Telstar-power-supply.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:ColecoTelstar.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V DC
|align="left"| 1976
|align="left"| 100mA
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Model 6041
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Console is powered by either six "C" batteries or a 9V adapter.
|-
|-
| Coleco Telstar Classic
| Coleco Telstar Classic
|align="right"|[[File:Original-Coleco-Telstar-power-supply.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco_Telstar_Classic_(1976)_2.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V DC
|align="left"| 1976
|align="left"| 100mA
|align="left"| Polarity unknown but the Atari 2600 adapter tends to be compatible.
|align="left"| Model 6041
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Typically the tip is positive but in some units, the polarity can be reversed and the unit may need repairs following a blown transistor.
|align="left"| Mono.
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Unusually for this series, the console doesn’t use batteries. The adapter is 100mA and outputs 3 watts at 60hz.
|-
|-
| Coleco Telstar Deluxe
| Coleco Telstar Deluxe (AKA World of Sports)
|align="left"| Output 9 volts
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco_Telstar_Deluxe.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| 1977
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Console verified to operate off either a 9V adapter or six C-Cell batteries. Other details TBD
|-
|-
| Coleco Telstar Ranger
| Coleco Telstar Ranger
|align="right"|[[File:Original-Coleco-Telstar-power-supply.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:S-l1600_(5).jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V DC
|align="left"| 1977
|align="left"| 100 mA
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Model 6041
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Console is powered by either six "C" batteries or a 9V adapter.
|-
|-
| Coleco Telstar Alpha
| Coleco Telstar Alpha
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco-Telstar-Alpha-power-supply.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco_Telstar_Alpha.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V DC
|align="left"| 1977
|align="left"| 100 mA
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Model 6041
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Console is powered by either six "C" batteries or a 9V adapter.
|-
|-
| Coleco Telstar Colormatic
| Coleco Telstar Colormatic
|align="right"|[[File:Colormatic-power-supply.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco_Telstar_Colormatic.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V DC
|align="left"| 1977
|align="left"| 200 mA
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|-
|-
| Coleco Telstar Regent
| Coleco Telstar Regent
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco-Telstar-Regent-power-options.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco_Telstar_Regent.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V DC
|align="left"| 1977
|align="left"| 200mA
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|-
|-
| Coleco Telstar Sportsman
| Coleco Telstar Sportsman
|align="left"| Output 9 volts
|align="left"| TBC
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| 1978
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Confirmed that console operates off batteries (size undetermined) and a 9V adapter. A standard Atari 2600 adapter will work. More details TBD
|-
|-
| Coleco Telstar Combat!
| Coleco Telstar Combat!
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco-Telstar-Combat-power-supply.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Telstar_Combat.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V DC
|align="left"| 1977
|align="left"| 200mA
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Console verified to run via six c-cell batteries or 9V adapter.
|-
|-
| Coleco Telstar Colortron
| Coleco Telstar Colortron
|align="right"|[[File:Colortron-power-supply.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco-Telstar-Colortron.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| 1978
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|-
|-
| Coleco Telstar Marksman
| Coleco Telstar Marksman
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco-Telstar-Marksman-power-supply.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco_Telstar_Marksman_Tietokonemuseo.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V DC
|align="left"| 1978
|align="left"| 200mA
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|-
|-
| Coleco Telstar Galaxy
| Coleco Telstar Galaxy
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco-Telstar-Gemini-power.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco-Telstar-Gemini-power.jpeg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V DC
|align="left"| 1977
|align="left"| 200mA
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Model 6041
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Confirmed that working AC adapter outputs 3W; unsure whether console has a battery compartment (TBD)
|-
|-
| Coleco Telstar Gemini
| Coleco Telstar Gemini
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco-Telstar-Gemini-power.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco-Telstar-Gemini-power.jpeg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V DC
|align="left"| 1977
|align="left"| 200mA
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Console does not have a battery compartment. Verified to work with slightly different “3W” version of the 6041-200ma Telstar AC adapter.
|-
|-
| Coleco Telstar Arcade
| Coleco Telstar Arcade
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco-Telstar-arcade-power-supply.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Coleco-Telstar-Arcade-Pongside-L.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V DC
|align="left"| 1977
|align="left"| 200 mA
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Model 6041-200ma
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Possibly could also be powered by D-size batteries (unconfirmed)
|-
|-
| Nintendo Color TV - Game 6
| Nintendo Color TV - Game 6
|align="right"|[[File:Nintendo-Color-TV-Game-6.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Nintendo-Color-TV-Game-Blockbreaker-FL.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V DC
|align="left"| 1977
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|}
|}
Line 421: Line 529:
! Console
! Console
!align="left"| Pictures
!align="left"| Pictures
!align="left"| Voltage
!align="left"| Year of Release
!align="left"| Amps
!align="left"| Audio Hardware
!align="left"| Polarity
!align="left"| Supported Audio Formats
!align="left"| Original PN
!align="left"| Supported Speaker Layouts
!align="left"| Replacement PN
!align="left"| Connection
!align="left"| Power Supply
!align="left"| Notes
!align="left"| Notes
|-
|-
| [[Atari_2600:Atari 2600 Mods Wiki|Atari 2600]]
| [[Atari_2600:Atari 2600 Mods Wiki|Atari 2600]]
|align="right"|[[File:Atari-2600.png|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Atari-2600.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 9V DC
|align="left"| 1977
|align="left"| 500 mA
|align="left"| Atari TIA
|align="left"| Tip positive
|align="left"|  
|align="left"| CO10472
Mono (Stock)
|align="left"| ?
 
|align="left"| 3.5 mm TS jack
Stereo (Modded)
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| Different styles of this AC adapter exist, but all have the same specs and part number
|align="left"| "Stereo" mods exist which split the TIA's two audio channels into left and right audio; however although this provides an enhanced audio experience for Atari 2600 users, true stereo effects are limited. Early games like ‘Combat’ were designed with the assumption that the 2600 would have two separate built-in speakers for each player’s sounds. However Atari removed this feature, and most of the library outputs music/effects in mono.
 
The stereo mod for the 2600 allows for potential stereo sound effects in newer homebrew games designed with stereo in mind. However, games without stereo programming may exhibit stereo-like effects or remain similar to their original mono output. Some games prioritize sound effects, causing them to come from random sides on a stereo-modded console. A prototype game called Sonar did demonstrate proper stereo utilization however. <ref>https://forums.atariage.com/topic/351323-atari-2600-stereo-mod-actually-making-a-significant-difference-to-audio-content-or-not//</ref>
|-
|-
| Magnavox Odyssey 2
| [[Odyssey2:Odyssey2 Mods Wiki|Magnavox Odyssey 2]]
|align="left"| 9V AC-12V AC, depending on PSU
|align="right"|[[File:Magnavox Odyssey2.png|200x200px]]
|align="left"| 400 mA-830 mA, depending on PSU
|align="left"| 1978
|align="left"| N/A
|align="left"| Intel 8244
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| 3.5 mm TS jack (early models) or 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack (later models)
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| Multiple revisions of the Odyssey 2 AC adapter exist, each with slightly different voltage and current ratings
|-
|-
| Philips Videopac G7000 (European release of Odyssey 2)
| Philips Videopac G7000 (European release of [[Odyssey2:Odyssey2 Mods Wiki|Odyssey 2]])
|align="right"|[[File:Philips Videopac G7000 power supply.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Videopac-pete-screen-800px.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| OUTPUT 9V DC
|align="left"| 1978
|align="left"| 1.3 A
|align="left"| Intel 8245
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| FW3300
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| External
|-
|-
| Mattel Intellivision
| [[Intellivision:Intellivision Mods Wiki|Mattel Intellivision]]
|align="left"| Input: 120V AC; Output: 5V DC, 12V DC, 16V DC (unregulated), -2.1V DC
|align="right"|[[File:Intellivision.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| 1979
|align="left"| N/A, power cord to electrical outlet is hardwired
|align="left"| General Instruments AY-3-8914
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| N/A
|align="left"| Internal
|align="left"| The ribbon cable that connects the power supply to the motherboard is ''extremely'' fragile, be very careful!
|-
|-
| Mattel Intellivision II
| [[Intellivision:Intellivision Mods Wiki|Mattel Intellivision II]]
|align="left"| 16.7V AC
|align="right"|[[File:Intellivision_II.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 1 A
|align="left"| 1983
|align="left"| N/A
|align="left"| General Instruments AY-3-8914
|align="left"| 5872-9629
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.5 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| A variation exists with slightly lower output voltage and current ratings (16.2V AC and 955 mA)
|-
|-
| Coleco ColecoVision
| [[ColecoVision:ColecoVision Mods Wiki|Coleco ColecoVision]]
|align="right"|[[File:Colecovisionpsu.png|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:ColecoVision.png|200x200px]]
|align="left"| 5V DC, -5V DC, 12V DC
|align="left"| 1982
|align="left"| 0.9 A (5V), 0.1 A (-5V), 0.3 A (12V)
|align="left"| Texas Instruments SN76489AN
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
|align="left"| 55416
|align="left"| N/A
|align="left"| Rectangular four-pin connector, same as used by the TI-99/4A computer (though not the same pinout!)
|align="left"| External
|align="left"|  
|align="left"|  
Mono (Stock)
Stereo (Modded)
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|-
|-
| [[Atari_5200:Atari 5200 Mods Wiki|Atari 5200]] (Four controller port model) *
| [[Atari_5200:Atari 5200 Mods Wiki|Atari 5200]] (Four controller port model) *
|align="right"|[[File:Atari-5200.png|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Atari-5200.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 11.5V DC
|align="left"| 1982
|align="left"| 1.95 A
|align="left"| Atari POKEY
|align="left"| Tip positive
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| C018187
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| WSU090-2000-13
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.5 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| The four-port Atari 5200 had an interesting "one cable" design where both the RF signal and the power ran through one coaxial cable which was permanently attached to the system. A power mod is available that allows the console to use a conventional switch box or direct RF adapter.
|-
|-
| [[Atari_5200:Atari 5200 Mods Wiki|Atari 5200]] (Two controller port model) *
| [[Atari_5200:Atari 5200 Mods Wiki|Atari 5200]] (Two controller port model) *
|align="right"|[[File:Atari-5200.png|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Atari-5200-'83.png|200x200px]]
|align="left"| 9.3V DC
|align="left"| 1983
|align="left"| 1.95 A
|align="left"| Atari POKEY
|align="left"| Tip positive
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| C018187
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| WSU090-2000-13
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.5 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| External
|align="left"|  
|-
|-
| GCE/MB Vectrex
| GCE/MB Vectrex
|align="right"|[[File:Vectrex rear view.jpeg|200px]]
|align="right"|[[File:Vectrex.png|250x250px]]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| 1982
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| General Instruments AY-3-8912
|align="left"| N/A, power cord to electrical outlet is hardwired
|align="left"|  
|align="left"| ?
Mono (Stock)
|align="left"| ?
 
|align="left"| N/A
Stereo (Modded)
|align="left"| Internal
|align="left"|  
|align="left"|  
[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0] (Stock)
[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0] (Modded)
|align="left"| Vectrex uses a General Instruments AY-3-8912 sound chip to deliver surprisingly good music and sound effects, as well as limited voice synthesis, via a 3-inch built-in paper cone speaker. A mod is available to add compatibility with external stereo speakers.




Line 534: Line 629:
! Console
! Console
!align="left"| Pictures
!align="left"| Pictures
!align="left"| Voltage
!align="left"| Year of Release
!align="left"| Amps
!align="left"| Audio Hardware
!align="left"| Polarity
!align="left"| Supported Audio Formats
!align="left"| Original PN
!align="left"| Supported Speaker Layouts
!align="left"| Replacement PN
!align="left"| Connection
!align="left"| Power Supply
!align="left"| Notes
!align="left"| Notes
|-
|-
| [[NES:NES Mods Wiki|Nintendo Entertainment System (US)]] *
| [[NES:NES Mods Wiki|Nintendo Entertainment System (US)]]
|align="right"| [[File:Nespsu.png|200px]]
|align="right"| [[File:NES.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 9V AC
|align="left"| 1985
|align="left"| 1.2 A
|align="left"| Ricoh 2A03
|align="left"| N/A
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| NES-002
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| WSU090-1300 or WSU090-1300-R
|align="left"| "Stereo" mods exist, but these simply divide some of the 2A03's audio channels between left and right.
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
|-
|align="left"| External
| [[NES:NES Mods Wiki|Nintendo Entertainment System (PAL)]]
|align="left"| The NES will accept a DC power supply so long as the voltage and current are within spec
|align="right"| [[File:Neseuropean_version.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| 1986
|align="left"| Ricoh 2A07
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| "Stereo" mods exist, but these simply divide some of the 2A03's audio channels between left and right.
|-
|-
| [[NES:NES Mods Wiki|Nintendo Entertainment System (PAL)]] *
| [[NES:NES Mods Wiki|Famicom]]
|align="left"| 9V AC
|align="right"| [[File:Famicom.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 1.2 A
|align="left"| 1983
|align="left"| N/A
|align="left"| Ricoh 2A03
|align="left"| NES-002
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| WSU090-1300-13 or WSU090-1300-R13
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.5 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| "Stereo" mods exist, but these simply divide some of the 2A03's audio channels between left and right.
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| The NES will accept a DC power supply so long as the voltage and current are within spec
|-
|-
| [[NES:NES Mods Wiki|Famicom]] *
| [[NES:NES Mods Wiki|Famicom Disk System]]
|align="right"| [[File:Famicompsu.png|200px]]
|align="right"| [[File:DiskSystem.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 10V DC
|align="left"| 1986
|align="left"| 850 mA
|align="left"| Ricoh 2C33
|align="left"| Tip negative
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| HVC-002
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| WSU090-1300-R
|align="left"| The Famicom Disk System generates an extra wavetable audio channel which is mixed in with the Famicom's internal audio
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| Applies to both original and AV Famicom models
|-
|-
| [[NES:NES Mods Wiki|Famicom Disk System]] *
| [[NES:NES Mods Wiki|Twin Famicom]]
|align="left"| 9V DC
|align="right"| [[File:TurboTwinFamicom.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 400 mA
|align="left"| 1986
|align="left"| Tip negative
|align="left"| Ricoh 2A03 + Ricoh 2C33
|align="left"| HVC-025
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| WSU090-1300-R
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| External or six internal C-cell batteries
|align="left"| With a splitter it should be possible to run both a Famicom and Disk System from a single AC adapter without batteries; the WSU-090-2000-R is recommended for this
|-
|-
| [[NES:NES Mods Wiki|Twin Famicom]] *
| [[SG-1000:SG-1000 Mods Wiki|Sega SG-1000]]
|align="left"| 7.6V DC
|align="right"| [[File:SG-1000.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 1.25 A
|align="left"| 1983
|align="left"| Tip positive
|align="left"| Texas Instruments SN76489AN
|align="left"| UADP-0041CEZZ
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| WSU075-1500-13
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.5 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| Please note that the Twin Famicom's power circuitry is very sensitive to input voltage, anything higher than 7.6V causes the power transistor to run very hot
|-
|-
| [[SG-1000:SG-1000 Mods Wiki|Sega SG-1000]] *
| [[SG-1000:SG-1000 Mods Wiki|Sega SG-1000 II]]
|align="left"| 9V DC
|align="right"| [[File:SG-1000II.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 850 mA
|align="left"| 1984
|align="left"| Tip negative
|align="left"| Texas Instruments SN76489AN (early revision)<br>Sega 315-5066 (later revision)
|align="left"| SA-150
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| WSU090-1300-R
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| External
|align="left"|  
|-
|-
| [[Master_System:Master System Mods Wiki|Sega Mark III]] *
| [[Master_System:Master System Mods Wiki|Sega Mark III]]
|align="left"| 9V DC
|align="right"| [[File:MarkIII.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 850 mA
|align="left"| 1985
|align="left"| Tip negative
|align="left"| Sega 315-5124
|align="left"| SA-150
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| WSU090-1300-R
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| External
|align="left"|  
|-
|-
| [[Master_System:Master System Mods Wiki|Sega Master System]] *
| [[Master_System:Master System Mods Wiki|Sega Master System]]
|align="left"| 9V DC
|align="right"| [[File:SMS.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 1 A
|align="left"| 1986
|align="left"| Tip negative
|align="left"| Sega 315-5124
|align="left"| 3025
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| WSU090-1300-R
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| Different styles of this AC adapter exist, but all have the same specs and part number
|-
|-
| [[Atari 7800:Atari 7800 Mods Wiki|Atari 7800]]
| [[Atari 7800:Atari 7800 Mods Wiki|Atari 7800]]
|align="right"| [[File:Atari-7800.png|200px]]
|align="right"| [[File:Atari-7800.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 9V DC
|align="left"| 1986
|align="left"| 1 A
|align="left"| Atari TIA
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| CO24471-001
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| "Stereo" mods exist which split the TIA's two audio channels between left and right audio
|-
| Casio PV-1000
|align="right"| [[File:PV1000.png|200x200px]]
|align="left"| 1983
|align="left"| NEC D65010G031
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Two-pin keyed connector
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| Different styles of this AC adapter exist, but all have the same specs and part number
|-
|-
| Casio PV-1000 *
| [[SCV:Super Cassette Vision Mods Wiki|Epoch Super Cassette Vision]]
|align="right"| [[File:Pv1000psu.png|200px]]
|align="right"| [[File:Super Cassette Vision.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 15V DC
|align="left"| 1984
|align="left"| 500 mA
|align="left"| NEC D1771C
|align="left"| Tip negative
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| AD-4815
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| WSU150-0560-R
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| External
|align="left"|  
|-
|-
| Epoch Super Cassette Vision *
| Amstrad GX4000
|align="left"| 8.5V DC
|align="right"| [[File:GX4000.png|200x200px]]
|align="left"| 800 mA
|align="left"| 1990
|align="left"| Tip negative
|align="left"| Microchip Technology AY-3-8912
|align="left"| N/A
|align="left"| Mono
|align="left"| WSU090-1300-R
|align="left"| [https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| External
|align="left"|
|-
| Amstrad GX4000 *
|align="left"| 11V DC
|align="left"| 500 mA
|align="left"| Tip positive
|align="left"| GX4000PSU/UK (UK), GX4000PSU/E (EU)
|align="left"| WSU090-1300
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| External
|align="left"|  


|}
|}
Line 671: Line 743:
==Fourth generation of consoles==
==Fourth generation of consoles==


{| class="wikitable"|-
{| class="wikitable" |-
! Console
!Console
!align="left"| Pictures
! align="left" |Pictures
!align="left"| Voltage
! align="left" |Year of Release
!align="left"| Amps
! align="left" |Audio Hardware
!align="left"| Polarity
! align="left" |Supported Audio Formats
!align="left"| Original PN
! align="left" |Supported Speaker Layouts
!align="left"| Replacement PN
! align="left" |Notes
!align="left"| Connection
|-
!align="left"| Power Supply
|[[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|PC Engine]]
!align="left"| Notes
| align="right" |[[File:PC-Engine.png|200px]]
| align="left" |1987
| align="left" |Hudson HuC6280
| align="left" |
*Mono
 
*Stereo
 
*Roland Surround Space (RSS)
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |Although it only shipped with an RF port, the PC Engine is notable as the first home gaming console to offer stereo audio, via the expansion port, but it must be amplified externally. To achieve stereo audio, as well as composite video, the user needed an add-on such as the [[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC PC Engine CD]]. <ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nUkTzqd_bpA</ref>
 
There were also several titles on the PC-Engine that used RSS, including Dracula X and Ys IV. <ref>https://medium.com/@Karakuroraka/im-not-sure-how-much-further-you-ve-dived-into-the-subject-but-i-m-aware-of-at-least-two-titles-a54fa45ece50</ref>
|-
|[[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC PC Engine CD]]
| align="right" |[[File:PCEngineCDROM.jpg|200px]]
| align="left" |1988
| align="left" |OKI M5205 (ADPCM) <br> Red Book CD audio
| align="left" |
*Mono
 
*Stereo
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |See above
|-
|[[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC TurboGrafx 16]]
| align="right" |[[File:TurboGrafx16.png|200px]]
| align="left" |1989
| align="left" |Hudson HuC6280
| align="left" |
*Mono
 
*Stereo
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |
Although it shipped with only an RF port, the TurboGrafx-16 is notable as the first home gaming console, released outside Japan, to offer stereo audio. Amplification was implemented similarly to the Japanese PC Engine, with the TurboBooster add-on allowing for stereo audio and composite video. <ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nUkTzqd_bpA</ref>
 
Unlike earlier consoles (from the Atari 2600 to the NES), which subsequently received homebrew hardware modifications to allow stereo audio, the TurboGrafx-16/PC Engine had games which were intentionally programmed with different audio channels, allowing for stereo audio effects where specific sounds or music elements emanated from either the right of the left speaker.
|-
|[[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC TurboGrafx-CD]] *
| align="right" |[[File:TurboGrafxCD.png|200px]]
| align="left" |1989
| align="left" |OKI M5205 (ADPCM) <br> Red Book CD audio
| align="left" |  
*Mono
 
*Stereo
| align="left" |  
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC TurboGrafx 16]] *
|[[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC SuperGrafx]]
|align="right"| [[File:TurboGrafx16.png|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:SuperGrafx.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 10.5V DC
| align="left" |1989
|align="left"| 730 mA
| align="left" |Hudson HuC6280
|align="left"| Tip negative
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| HES-ACA-01
*Mono
|align="left"| WSU090-1300-R
 
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
*Stereo
|align="left"| External
| align="left" |  
|align="left"|  
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|PC Engine]] *
|[[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC TurboExpress/PC Engine GT]]
|align="right"| [[File:PC-Engine.png|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:TurboExpress.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 9V DC
| align="left" |1990
|align="left"| 650 mA
| align="left" |Hudson HuC6280
|align="left"| Tip negative
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| PAD-105/PAD-106
*Mono
|align="left"| WSU090-1300-R
 
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
*Stereo
|align="left"| External
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| Same information also applies to both Core Grafx models and the PC Engine Shuttle
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |The system only has a single speaker but stereo out is available from the headphone jack
|-
|-
| [[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC PC Engine CD]] *
|[[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC TurboDuo/PC Engine Duo]]
|align="left"| 9V DC
| align="right" |[[File:TurboDuo.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 1.45 A
| align="left" |1991
|align="left"| Tip negative
| align="left" |Hudson HuC6280 <br> Oki M5205 (ADPCM) <br> Red Book CD audio
|align="left"| AD-IF30/AD-IF30A
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| WSU090-2000-R13
*Mono
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.5 mm barrel jack
 
|align="left"| External
*Stereo
|align="left"| Note that this is for the IFU-30 interface; the CD player portion (CDR-30) uses the same AC adapter as the PC Engine console when used as a standalone CD player
| align="left" |  
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC TurboGrafx-CD]] *
|[[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC Super CD-ROM2]]
|align="right"| [[File:TurboGrafxCD.png|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:SuperCDROM2.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| 11V DC
| align="left" |1991
|align="left"| 1.53 A
| align="left" |Oki M5205 (ADPCM) <br> Red Book CD audio
|align="left"| Tip negative
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| HES-ACA-02
*Mono
|align="left"| WSU120-2000-R13
 
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.5 mm barrel jack
*Stereo
|align="left"| External
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| Note that this is for the dock; the CD player portion (HES-CDR-01) uses the same AC adapter as the TG-16 console when used as a standalone CD player. Also note that the TG-CD dock will not power up properly with anything less than 10V, and the CD player will not read discs when docked
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC SuperGrafx]]
|[[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC PC Engine LT]]
|align="right"| [[File:SuperGrafx.png|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:PC_Engine_LT.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| 9V DC
| align="left" |1991
|align="left"| 800 mA
| align="left" |Hudson HuC6280
|align="left"| Tip positive
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| PAD-113
*Mono
|align="left"| ?
 
|align="left"| 6.3 x 3.0 mm barrel jack
*Stereo
|align="left"| External
| align="left" |  
|align="left"|  
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |The system only has a single speaker but stereo out is available from the headphone jack
|-
|-
| [[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC TurboExpress/PC Engine GT]]
|[[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC PC Engine Duo-R/Duo-RX]]
|align="left"| 7V DC
| align="right" |[[File:DuoR.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 700 mA
| align="left" |1993
|align="left"| Tip positive
| align="left" |Hudson HuC6280 <br> Oki M5205 (ADPCM) <br> Red Book CD audio
|align="left"| HES-ACA-04 (US), PAD-121 (JP)
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| ?
*Mono
|align="left"| 3.5 x 1.35 mm barrel jack
 
|align="left"| External or six internal AA-cell batteries
*Stereo
|align="left"|  
| align="left" |  
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC TurboDuo/PC Engine Duo]]
| rowspan="2" |[[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega Mega Drive (model 1)]]
|align="left"| 10V DC
| align="right" |[[File:JP Mega Drive Model 1.png|200x200px]]
|align="left"| 1 A
| rowspan="2" align="left" |1988 (JP)
|align="left"| Tip positive
1990 (PAL)
|align="left"| HES-ACA-05 (US), PAD-124 (JP)
| rowspan="7" |Yamaha YM2612 (FM + PCM)<br>Sega VDP (PSG)
|align="left"| ?
| rowspan="2" align="left" |
|align="left"| 6.3 x 3.0 mm barrel jack
*Mono
|align="left"| External
 
|align="left"| NEC also released an external battery pack for the Duo in Japan only
*Stereo
| rowspan="2" align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| rowspan="3" align="left" |The AV connector only has mono out, but stereo out is available from the headphone jack. Rear stereo out can also be modded into these consoles.
|-
|-
| [[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC Super CD-ROM2]]
|[[File:Sega-Mega-Drive-EU-Mk1-wController-FL.png|frameless|200x200px]]
|align="left"| 12V DC
|align="left"| 1 A
|align="left"| Tip positive
|align="left"| PAD-125
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| 6.3 x 3.0 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| The Super CD-ROM2 also has a jumper cable which passes through power to the connected PC Engine console. This cable plugs into a 3.5 mm x 1.35 mm barrel jack on the Super CD and then into the power jack on the PC Engine.
|-
|-
| [[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC PC Engine LT]]
|[[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega Genesis (model 1)]]
|align="left"| 9V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Genesis Model 1.png|200x200px]]
|align="left"| 700 mA
| align="left" |1989
|align="left"| Tip positive
| align="left" |
|align="left"| PAD-127
*Mono
|align="left"| ?
 
|align="left"| ?
*Stereo
|align="left"| External
| align="left" |
|align="left"| ?
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
|-
|-
| [[TG16:TurboGrafx-16 Mods Wiki|NEC PC Engine Duo-R/Duo-RX]]
|[[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega Genesis (model 2)]]
|align="left"| 9V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Genesis_Model_2.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 1 A
| align="left" |1993
|align="left"| Tip positive
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| PAD-129/PAD-130
*Mono
|align="left"| ?
 
|align="left"| EIAJ-03 barrel jack
*Stereo
|align="left"| External
| align="left" |  
|align="left"|  
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega Genesis (model 1)]] *
|[[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega Genesis 3]]
|align="left"| 9V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Genesis_Model_3.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 1.2 A
| align="left" |1998
|align="left"| Tip negative
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| MK-1602
*Mono
|align="left"| WSU090-1300-R
 
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
*Stereo (with mod)
|align="left"| External
| align="left" |  
|align="left"|  
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0] (with mod)
| align="left" |Can be modified for stereo sound
|-
|-
| [[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega Mega Drive (model 1)]] *
|[[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega Mega Jet]]
|align="right"| [[File:Genesis_Model_1.png|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:Sega_mega_jet.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| 9V DC
| align="left" |1994
|align="left"| 1.2 A
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| Tip negative
*Mono
|align="left"| SA-160 (JP)
 
|align="left"| WSU090-1300-R
*Stereo
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| External
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"|  
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega Genesis (model 2)]]
|[[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega Nomad]]
|align="right"| [[File:Genesis_Model_2.png|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:Sega_Nomad.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 10V DC
| align="left" |1995
|align="left"| 850 mA
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| Tip positive
*Mono
|align="left"| MK-2103 (US), SA-190 (JP)
 
|align="left"| ?
*Stereo
|align="left"| EIAJ-03 barrel jack
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| External
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"|  
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |The system only has a single speaker but stereo out is available from the headphone jack and AV out
|-
|-
| [[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega Genesis 3]]
| align="left" |Sega CD
|align="right"| [[File:Genesis_Model_3.png|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:Sega_CD_Model_1.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 10V DC
| align="left" |1991
|align="left"| 300 mA
| align="left" |Ricoh RF5C164
|align="left"| Tip positive
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| MK-1479
*Mono
|align="left"| ?
 
|align="left"| EIAJ-03 barrel jack
*Stereo
|align="left"| External
 
|align="left"|  
*Roland Sound Space (RSS)
| align="left" |  
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |'Snatcher' and 'Shadow of the Beast 2' confirmed to support RSS. ([https://medium.com/@Karakuroraka/im-not-sure-how-much-further-you-ve-dived-into-the-subject-but-i-m-aware-of-at-least-two-titles-a54fa45ece50 Link])
|-
|-
| [[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega Mega Jet]]
|[[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega/Victor Wondermega RG-M1]]
|align="left"| 10V DC
| align="right" |[[File:VictorWondermega.jpg|200x200px]]
|align="left"| 850 mA
| align="left" |1992
|align="left"| Tip positive
| rowspan="3" align="left" | Yamaha YM3438 core (FM + PCM)<br>Sega VDP (PSG)<br>Ricoh RF5C164
|align="left"| SA-190
| align="left" |
|align="left"| ?
*Mono
|align="left"| EIAJ-03 barrel jack
 
|align="left"| External
*Stereo
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega Genesis Nomad]]
|[[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|JVC X'Eye/Victor Wondermega RG-M2]]
|align="right"| [[File:Sega_Nomad.png|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:Wondermega M2.png|frameless|200x200px]]
|align="left"| 10V DC
| align="left" |1993
|align="left"| 850 mA
| align="left" |
|align="left"| Tip positive
*Mono
|align="left"| MK-2103
 
|align="left"| ?
*Stereo
|align="left"| EIAJ-03 barrel jack
| align="left" |
|align="left"| External or six AA-cell batteries via clip-on pack or rechargeable battery via clip-on pack
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| ?
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega 32X]]
|[[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega CDX]]
|align="right"| [[File:Sega_32X.png|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:Sega_CDX.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 10V DC
| align="left" |1994
|align="left"| 850 mA
| align="left" |
|align="left"| Tip positive
*Mono
|align="left"| MK-2103 (US), SA-190 (JP)
 
|align="left"| ?
*Stereo
|align="left"| EIAJ-03 barrel jack
| align="left" |
|align="left"| External
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|align="left"| Exactly the same as the model 2 Genesis/Mega Drive
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega/Victor Wondermega RG-M1]]
|[[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega 32X]]
|align="left"| 9.5V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Sega_32X.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 1.5 A
| align="left" |1994
|align="left"| Tip positive
| align="left" |Sega 315-5818
|align="left"| AA-S95
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| ?
*Mono
|align="left"| EIAJ-03 barrel jack
 
|align="left"| External
*Stereo
|align="left"|  
 
*QSound
| align="left" |  
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|Sega CDX]]
|[[Game Gear:Game Gear Mods Wiki|Sega Game Gear]] *
|align="right"| [[File:Sega_CDX.png|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:Game_Gear.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 9.5V DC
| align="left" |1990
|align="left"| 1.5 A
| align="left" |Texas Instruments SN76489A core (PSG)
|align="left"| Tip positive
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| MK-4122
*Mono
|align="left"| ?
 
|align="left"| EIAJ-03 barrel jack
*Stereo
|align="left"| External
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| Do ''not'' use the MK-2103 AC adapter as it does not supply enough current
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |This system only has a single speaker, but stereo out is available from the headphone jack
|-
|-
| [[Genesis:Genesis Mods Wiki|JVC X'Eye/Victor Wondermega RG-M2]]
|[[Game Boy:Game Boy Mods Wiki|Nintendo Game Boy (DMG)]]
|align="left"| 9.5V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Game_Boy.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 1.5 A
| align="left" |1989
|align="left"| Tip positive
| rowspan="4" align="left" |Sharp LR35902
|align="left"| AA-S95 (JP), AA-S95J (US)
| rowspan="4" align="left" |  
|align="left"| ?
*Mono
|align="left"| EIAJ-03 barrel jack
 
|align="left"| External
*Stereo
|align="left"| Same specs as the CDX AC adapter; as with the CDX do ''not'' use the MK-2103 AC adapter as it does not supply enough current
| rowspan="4" align="left" |  
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| rowspan="4" align="left" |This system only has a single speaker, but stereo out is available from the headphone jack
|-
|-
| [[Game Gear:Game Gear Mods Wiki|Sega Game Gear]] *
|[[Game Boy:Game Boy Mods Wiki|Nintendo Game Boy Pocket]]
|align="right"| [[File:Game_Gear.png|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:Game_Boy_Pocket.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 9V DC (JP/EU), 10V DC (US)
| align="left" |1996
|align="left"| 850 mA or 1.2 A (JP), 850 mA (US), 1.2 A (EU)
|align="left"| Tip negative (EU/JP), tip positive (US)
|align="left"| SA-150 or SA-160 (JP), 2103/MK-2103 (US), 1605 (EU)
|align="left"| WSU090-1300-R (EU/JP)
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack (EU/JP), EIAJ-03 barrel jack (US)
|align="left"| External or six internal AA-cell batteries
|align="left"| European and Japanese Game Gears use the same AC adapter as the model 1 Mega Drive, whereas (for some reason) US models use a different AC adapter which was later used for the model 2 Genesis/Mega Drive
|-
|-
| [[Game Boy:Game Boy Mods Wiki|Nintendo Game Boy]]
|[[Game Boy:Game Boy Mods Wiki|Nintendo Game Boy Light]]
|align="right"| [[File:Game_Boy.png|200px]]
|[[File:Game Boy Light.png|244x244px]]
|align="left"| 4.8V DC
| rowspan="2" |1998
|align="left"| 150 mA
|align="left"| Tip negative
|align="left"| DMG-003
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| External or four internal AA-cell batteries
|align="left"| Also doubles as a rechargeable battery pack
|-
|-
| [[Game Boy:Game Boy Mods Wiki|Nintendo Game Boy Pocket]]
|[[Game Boy:Game Boy Mods Wiki|Nintendo Game Boy Color]]
|align="right"| [[File:Game_Boy_Pocket.png|200px]]
|[[File:Game Boy Color.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 3V DC
|align="left"| 300 mA
|align="left"| Tip positive
|align="left"| MGB-005
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| External or two internal AAA-cell batteries
|align="left"| ?
|-
|-
| [[SNES:SNES Mods Wiki|Super Nintendo (US)]]
|[[SNES:SNES Mods Wiki|Super Nintendo (US)]]
|align="right"| [[File:SNES.png|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:SNES.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 10V DC
| align="left" | 1991
|align="left"| 850 mA
| rowspan="3" align="left" |Sony SPC700
|align="left"| Tip negative
| rowspan="3" align="left" |
|align="left"| SNS-002
*Mono
|align="left"| ?
 
|align="left"| 6.9 mm x 4.1 mm barrel jack with 0.7 mm inner pin
*Stereo
|align="left"| External
 
|align="left"|
*Dolby Surround
| rowspan="3" align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Dolby_Surround_4.0.jpg 4.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[SNES:SNES Mods Wiki|Super Famicom]] *
|[[SNES:SNES Mods Wiki|Super Famicom]] *
|align="right"| [[File:Super_Famicom.png|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:Super_Famicom.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 10V DC
| align="left" |1990
|align="left"| 850 mA
| align="left" | ?
|align="left"| Tip negative
|align="left"| HVC-002
|align="left"| WSU090-1300-R
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| Exactly the same as the original Famicom
|-
|-
| [[SNES:SNES Mods Wiki|Super Nintendo (PAL)]] *
| [[SNES:SNES Mods Wiki|Super Nintendo (PAL)]] *
|align="left"| 9V AC
| align="right" |[[File:SNES Jr Europe.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 1.2 A
| align="left" |1992
|align="left"| Not applicable
| align="left" | ?
|align="left"| NES-002
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.5 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| Exactly the same as the PAL NES; the PAL SNES has a charge pump circuit which generates 12V DC for SCART autoswitching, hence the use of an AC power supply
|-
|-
| SNK Neo Geo AES *
|[[Neo Geo:Neo Geo Mods Wiki|SNK Neo Geo AES]] *
|align="left"| 5V DC (PRO-POW models only), 10V DC (PRO-POW3/E models only)
| align="right" |[[File:Neo-Geo-AES-Console-Set.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 3 A (5V), 1 A (10V)
| align="left" |1990
|align="left"| Tip negative
| align="left" |Yamaha YM2610
|align="left"| PRO-POW (5V) NEO-POW3 (10V)
| align="left" |
|align="left"| WSU050-3000-R (5V), WSU090-1300-R (10V)
*Mono
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
 
|align="left"| External
*Stereo
|align="left"| Older AES consoles used a regulated 5V DC AC adapter while newer models had an unregulated 10V supply. Be *very* careful!
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |The AV connector only has mono output, but stereo out is available from the headphone jack.
|-
|-
| SNK Neo Geo CD
|[[Neo Geo:Neo Geo Mods Wiki|SNK Neo Geo CD]]
|align="right"| [[File: Neo-Geo-CD.jpeg|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:Neo-Geo-CD-TopLoader-wController-FL.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 5V DC, 12V DC
| align="left" |1994
|align="left"| 2 A (5V), 1 A (12V)
| align="left" | Yamaha YM2610 + Red Book CD audio
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
| align="left" |
|align="left"| POWCD-J (JP)
*Mono
|align="left"| N/A
 
|align="left"| Three-pin connector, same as found on some Panasonic and Sony MSX2 models (though not the same pinout!)
*Stereo
|align="left"| External
| align="left" |
|align="left"| ?
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| Pioneer LaserActive
|Pioneer LaserActive
|align="right"| [[File:LaserActive.png|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:LaserActive.png|200px]]  
|align="left"| Input: 100V AC (JP), 120V AC (US)
| align="left" |1993
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" | ?
|align="left"| N/A, power cord is hardwired
| align="left" |
|align="left"| N/A
*Mono
|align="left"| N/A
 
|align="left"| N/A
*Stereo
|align="left"| Internal
 
|align="left"| ?
*Roland Sound Space (RSS)
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | ?


|}
|}
Line 994: Line 1,167:
==Fifth generation of consoles==
==Fifth generation of consoles==


{| class="wikitable"|-
{| class="wikitable" |-
! Console
! Console
!align="left"| Pictures
! align="left" | Pictures
!align="left"| Voltage
! align="left" |Year of Release
!align="left"| Amps
! align="left" | Audio Hardware
!align="left"| Polarity
! align="left" |Supported Audio Formats
!align="left"| Original PN
! align="left" |Supported Speaker Layouts
!align="left"| Replacement PN
! align="left" |Notes
!align="left"| Connection
|-
!align="left"| Power Supply
|Commodore Amiga CD32
!align="left"| Notes
| align="right" |[[File:CD32.png|200x200px]]
| align="left" |1993
| align="left" |Commodore Paula <br>Red Book CD audio
| align="left" |
*Mono
 
*Stereo
 
*Roland Surround Space (RSS)
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |
*4 × 8-bit PCM channels
*Stereo audio (RCA)
*3.5mm headphone jack
*RSS was used on Xenon 2 for the Amiga CDTV and CD32 ([https://medium.com/@Karakuroraka/im-not-sure-how-much-further-you-ve-dived-into-the-subject-but-i-m-aware-of-at-least-two-titles-a54fa45ece50 Link])
|-
|-
| Commodore Amiga CD32
|[[3DO:3DO Mods Wiki|Panasonic 3DO]]
|align="left"| 5V DC, 12V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Panasonic_3DO_FZ-1.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |1993
|align="left"| N/A
| align="left" | Custom
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |
|align="left"| ?
*Mono
|align="left"| 4-pin DIN
 
|align="left"| External
*Stereo
|align="left"| ?
 
*Dolby Surround
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Dolby_Surround_4.0.jpg 4.0]
| align="left" |
*16-bit stereo sound
*Stereo CDDA playback.
*44.1 kHz sound sampling rate
*Supports 4-Channel Dolby Surround sound
*Custom 20-bit digital signal processor (DSP) – 20-bit accumulator with 16-bit parameter registers for extended precision, embedded in the CLIO chip.
*13 DMA channels of digital input, to be sampled, and distorted by the DSP.
|-
|-
| [[3DO:3DO Mods Wiki|Panasonic 3DO]]
|[[Jaguar:Jaguar Mods Wiki|Atari Jaguar]] *
|align="left"| ?
| align="right" |[[File:Atari-Jaguar.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |1993
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |Motorola SC414201FT/Atari Jerry
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |
|align="left"| ?
*Mono
|align="left"| ?
 
|align="left"| ?
*Stereo
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |
* CD-quality sound (16-bit stereo)
*Number of sound channels limited by software
*Two DACs (stereo) convert digital data to analog sound signals
*Full stereo capabilities
|-
|-
| [[Jaguar:Jaguar Mods Wiki|Atari Jaguar]] *
|[[Jaguar:Jaguar Mods Wiki|Atari Jaguar CD]] *
|align="right"|[[File:Atari-Jaguar.png|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:Atari-Jaguar-CD-wPro-Controller.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| 9V DC
| align="left" |1995
|align="left"| 1.2 A
| align="left" |Red Book CD audio
|align="left"| Tip negative
| align="left" | ?
|align="left"| 500273/PP-912
| align="left" | ?
|align="left"| WSU090-1300-R
| align="left" | ?
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
|align="left"| External
|align="left"|  
|-
|-
| [[Jaguar:Jaguar Mods Wiki|Atari Jaguar CD]] *
|Bandai Playdia *
|align="left"| 9V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Bandai-Playdia-Set-R.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| 1.2 A
| align="left" |1994
|align="left"| Tip negative
| align="left" |Asahi Kasei AK8000 <br>Red Book CD audio
|align="left"| 500273/PP-912
| align="left" |
|align="left"| WSU090-1300-R
*Mono
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
 
|align="left"| External
*Stereo
|align="left"| Exactly the same as the Jaguar itself
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | The console has a standard red/white right/left audio output socket and yellow composite video output (Source: Adam Koralik - Bandai Playdia - Fifth VideoGame Generation Recap)
|-
|-
| Bandai Playdia *
|[[Saturn:Saturn Mods Wiki|Sega Saturn]]
|align="left"| 9V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Saturn_Model_1.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 850 mA
| align="left" | 1994
|align="left"| Tip positive
| align="left" |Yamaha YMF292/Sega 315-5687 <br>Red Book CD audio
|align="left"| BA-002
| align="left" |
|align="left"| WSU090-1300
*Mono
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.1 mm barrel jack
 
|align="left"| External
*Stereo
|align="left"|  
 
*QSound
 
*Dolby Surround
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Dolby_Surround_4.0.jpg 4.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[Saturn:Saturn Mods Wiki|Sega Saturn]]
|[[PS1:PS1 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="right" |[[File:PS1.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |1994
|align="left"| N/A
| rowspan="2" align="left" |Sony SPU <br>Red Book CD audio
|align="left"| ?
| rowspan="2" align="left" |
|align="left"| ?
*Mono
|align="left"| C7
 
|align="left"| Internal
*Stereo
|align="left"| North American consoles have a polarized connector
 
*Dolby Surround
| rowspan="2" align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Dolby_Surround_4.0.jpg 4.0]
| align="left" | Early models (SCPH-100x) come with standard RCA outputs. Late production versions of this model also featured higher quality DACs. It and all other models also include Sony's AV multi out connector.
|-
|-
| [[PS1:PS1 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation]]
|[[PS1:PS1 Mods Wiki|Sony PSone]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="right" |[[File:PSOne.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |2000
|align="left"| N/A
| align="left" | ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| C7
|align="left"| Internal
|align="left"| North American consoles have a polarized connector
|-
|-
| [[PS1:PS1 Mods Wiki|Sony PSone]]
|NEC PC-FX
|align="left"| 7.5V DC
| align="right" |[[File:PC-FX-Console-Set.jpg|200px]]
|align="left"| 2 A
| align="left" |1994
|align="left"| Tip positive
| align="left" |Hudson HuC6230 <br> Red Book CD audio
|align="left"| SCPH-112 (JP), SCPH-113 (US), SCPH-114 (EU), SCPH-115 (UK)
| align="left" |
|align="left"| ?
*Mono
|align="left"| EIAJ-03 barrel jack
 
|align="left"| External
*Stereo
|align="left"| Do ''not'' use a PS2 slim AC adapter!
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |16-Bit Stereo with 2 ADPCM channels and 6 sample channels at 44.1kHz.
|-
|-
| NEC PC-FX
|Casio Loopy
|align="left"| Input: 100V AC
| align="right" |[[File:Loopy.png|200x200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |1995
|align="left"| N/A, power cord is hardwired
| align="left" | ?
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |
|align="left"| N/A
*Mono
|align="left"| N/A
 
|align="left"| Internal
*Stereo
|align="left"|
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |The console has a standard red/white right/left audio output socket and yellow composite video output (Source: Adam Koralik - Casio Loopy - Fifth VideoGame Generation Recap) Mono accessed via Left/white output.
|-
|-
| Casio Loopy
|Nintendo Virtual Boy<ref>https://www.copetti.org/writings/consoles/virtual-boy/#audio</ref>
|align="left"| 24V DC
|[[File:Virtual Boy.png|frameless|254x254px]]
|align="left"| 1 A
|1995
|align="left"| Tip positive
|Nintendo Virtual Sound Unit
|align="left"| AD-2410J
|
|align="left"| ?
* Mono
|align="left"| 5.5 x 2.5 mm barrel jack
* Stereo
|align="left"| External
|
|align="left"| ?
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
|
* 10-Bit stereo sound
* 41.7 kHz sampling rate
|-
|-
| Apple Pippin
|[[N64:N64 Mods Wiki|Nintendo 64]]<ref>https://www.copetti.org/writings/consoles/nintendo-64/#audio</ref>
|align="left"| Input: 100-240V AC
| align="right" |[[File:N64.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" | 1996
|align="left"| N/A
| align="left" |Nintendo RCP-NUS
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |
|align="left"| N/A
*Mono
|align="left"| C14
 
|align="left"| Internal
*Stereo
|align="left"|  
 
*Dolby Surround
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Dolby_Surround_4.0.jpg 4.0]
| align="left" |TBC - Dolby surround confirmed with Ocarina of Time and unreleased Dinosaur Planet http://archive.thegia.com/n64/dino/dino.html
|-
|-
| [[N64:N64 Mods Wiki|Nintendo 64]]
|Apple Pippin
|align="left"| 3.3V DC, 12V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Pippin.png|200x200px]]
|align="left"| 2.7 A (3.3V), 0.8 A (12V)
| align="left" |1996
|align="left"| N/A, entire power supply is designed to only fit one way into the console itself
| align="left" | ?
|align="left"| NUS-002
| align="left" |
|align="left"| ?
*Mono
|align="left"| Proprietary connector
 
|align="left"| External
*Stereo
|align="left"|
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]


*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |RCA composite left/right stereo, 16-bit 44 kHz sampled, and headphone output jack
|}
|}


==Sixth generation of consoles==
==Sixth generation of consoles==


{| class="wikitable"|-
{| class="wikitable" |-
! Console
!Console  
!align="left"| Pictures
! align="left" |Pictures
!align="left"| Voltage
! align="left" |Year of Release
!align="left"| Amps
! align="left" |Audio Hardware
!align="left"| Polarity
! align="left" |Supported Audio Formats
!align="left"| Original PN
! align="left" |Supported Speaker Layouts
!align="left"| Replacement PN
! align="left" |Notes
!align="left"| Connection
!align="left"| Power Supply
!align="left"| Notes
|-
|-
| [[GBA:Game_Boy_Advance_Mods_Wiki|Game Boy Advance]]
|[[GBA:Game_Boy_Advance_Mods_Wiki|Game Boy Advance]]
|align="left"| 3.3V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Game_Boy_Advance.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 350 mA
| align="left" |2001
|align="left"| N/A, connector is molded to only fit one way into the system
| rowspan="3" align="left" |Sharp LR35902
|align="left"| AGB-009
| rowspan="3" align="left" |
|align="left"| ?
*Mono (Built-in Speaker)
|align="left"| N/A, fits into battery bay
 
|align="left"| External or two internal AA-cell batteries
*Stereo
|align="left"| The original GBA does not have a dedicated AC adapter input like other Game Boy systems, all external AC adapters use the battery terminals
| rowspan="3" align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| rowspan="3" align="left" |The system only has a mono speaker but stereo out is available from the headphone jack. The SP has no built-in port, thus requires a charging port to headphone jack adapter in order to use headphones.
|-
|-
| [[GBA:Game_Boy_Advance_Mods_Wiki|Game Boy Advance SP]]
|[[GBA:Game_Boy_Advance_Mods_Wiki|Game Boy Advance SP]]
|align="left"| 5.2V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Game_Boy_Advance_SP.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 320 mA
| align="left" |2003
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
|align="left"| AGS-002
|align="left"| Unofficial 5 V USB cables
|align="left"| Proprietary connector
|align="left"| External
|align="left"|  
|-
|-
| [[GBA:Game_Boy_Advance_Mods_Wiki|Game Boy Micro]]
|[[GBA:Game_Boy_Advance_Mods_Wiki|Game Boy Micro]]
|align="left"| 5.2V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Game_Boy_Micro.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 320 mA
| align="left" |2005
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
|align="left"| OXY-002
|align="left"| Unofficial 5 V USB cables
|align="left"| Proprietary connector
|align="left"| External
|align="left"|  
|-
|-
| [[Dreamcast:Dreamcast Mods Wiki|Sega Dreamcast]]
|[[Dreamcast:Dreamcast Mods Wiki|Sega Dreamcast]]
|align="left"| Input: 100V AC (JP), 120V AC (US), 220/240V AC (EU/UK); Output: 3.3V DC, 5V DC, 12V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Dreamcast.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |1998
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |Yamaha AICA
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |
|align="left"| N/A
*Mono
|align="left"| C7
 
|align="left"| Internal
*Stereo
|align="left"| North American consoles have a polarized connector
 
*QSound
 
*Dolby Surround
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[PS2:PS2 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 2 (original)]]
|[[PS2:PS2 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 2]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="right" |[[File:PS2 Fat.png|200x200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" | 2000
|align="left"| ?
| rowspan="3" align="left" |Sony SPU2
|align="left"| ?
| rowspan="3" align="left" |
|align="left"| ?
*Mono
|align="left"| C7
 
|align="left"| Internal
*Stereo
|align="left"| North American consoles have a polarized connector
 
*Dolby Pro Logic II
 
*DTS Interactive
| rowspan="3" align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| rowspan="3" align="left" |The PlayStation 2 was the first game console to output digital audio, in this case via an optical connector.
 
Four-channel DTS Interactive was the only discrete format (beyond Stereo) that the PS2 could process in real time and this was used by nearly a dozen games, including Grand Theft Auto: Vice City and Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines. The PS2 could also send a 5.1 Dolby Digital stream, but only during cut scenes where the audio didn't have to be dynamically generated on the spot. 
|-
|-
| [[PS2:PS2 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 2 (slim, SCPH-7xxxx)]]
|[[PS2:PS2 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 2 (SCPH-7xxxx)]]
|align="right"| [[File:PS2 (Slim, SCPH 7xxxx) power supply.jpeg|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:PS2_Slim.png|200px]]
|align="left"| Input: 100V-240V AC; Output: 8.5V DC
| align="left" |2004
|align="left"| Input: 1.5 A, Output: 5.65 A
|align="left"| Tip positive
|align="left"| SCPH-70100
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| EIAJ-03 barrel jack
|align="left"| External
|align="left"|
|-
|-
| [[PS2:PS2 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 2 (slim, SCPH-9000x)]]
|[[PS2:PS2 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 2 (SCPH-900xx)]]
|align="left"| Input: 100-240V AC; Output: 7.5V DC
| align="right" |[[File:PS2_Slim_2.png|200px]]
|align="left"| Output: 4.5 A
| align="left" |2007
|align="left"| N/A
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| C7 non-polarized
|align="left"| Internal
|align="left"| Power supply is multivoltage despite what is indicated on the outside of the console
|-
|-
| VM Labs Nuon
| VM Labs Nuon
|align="left"| Input: 120V AC
| align="right" |[[File:Samsung Nuon N2000.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |2000
|align="left"| N/A, power cord is hardwired
| align="left" | ?
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |
|align="left"| ?
*Mono
|align="left"| N/A
 
|align="left"| Internal
*Stereo
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |32-megabyte 8-bit Fast Page DRAM at 33 MHz, 512-kilobytes sound RAM and 24-kilobytes programmable ROM
|-
|-
| [[Xbox:Original Xbox Mods Wiki|Microsoft Xbox]]
|[[Xbox:Original Xbox Mods Wiki|Microsoft Xbox]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="right" |[[File:Xbox.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |2001
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |NVIDIA Soundstorm (DSP/APU)
|align="left"| ?
[https://consolemods.org/wiki/images/7/7e/WM9709.pdf Wolfson WM9709] (DAC)
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |
|align="left"| C7 non-polarized
*Mono
|align="left"| Internal
*Stereo
|align="left"|
*Dolby Pro Logic II
*Dolby Digital / AC3
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |Digital output only officially available with certain cables.
Audio processor was integrated in the NVIDIA MCPX south bridge.
|-
|-
| [[GameCube:GameCube Mods Wiki|Nintendo GameCube]]
|[[GameCube:GameCube Mods Wiki|Nintendo GameCube]]
|align="right"| [[File:Gamecube-power-supply.jpeg|200px]]
| align="right" |[[File:GameCube.png|200px]] [[File:Panasonic_Q.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 12V DC
| align="left" |2001
|align="left"| 3.25 A
| align="left" |Macronix 16-bit DSP
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
| align="left" |
|align="left"| DOL-002
* Mono
|align="left"| ?
 
|align="left"| Proprietary connector
*Stereo
|align="left"| External
 
|align="left"|
*Dolby Pro Logic II
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout%20with%20subwoofer.jpg 2.1]
| align="left" |Panasonic Q version of the Gamecube may have been the first console in history to support the native use of subwoofers, mainly for DVD playback as opposed to in-game use. Digital audio available from digital output (but not officially used).
Audio processor was integrated into the "Flipper" GPU.


|}
|}
Line 1,249: Line 1,512:
==Seventh generation of consoles==
==Seventh generation of consoles==


{| class="wikitable"|-
{| class="wikitable" |-
! Console
!Console
!align="left"| Pictures
! align="left" |Pictures
!align="left"| Voltage
! align="left" |Year of Release
!align="left"| Amps
! align="left" |Audio Hardware
!align="left"| Polarity
! align="left" |Supported Audio Formats
!align="left"| Original PN
! align="left" |Supported Speaker Layouts
!align="left"| Replacement PN
! align="left" |Notes
!align="left"| Connection
!align="left"| Power Supply
!align="left"| Notes
|-
|-
| [[NDS:DS_Mods_Wiki|Nintendo DS]]
|[[NDS:DS_Mods_Wiki|Nintendo DS series]] incl. DSi
|align="left"| 5.2 V DC
| align="right" |[[File:DS.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 320 mA
| align="left" |2004
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
| align="left" |Mitsumi MM3205B
|align="left"| AGS-002
| align="left" |
|align="left"| Unofficial 5 V USB cables
*Stereo
|align="left"| Proprietary connector
 
|align="left"| External
*Pseudo-Surround
|align="left"| Same as GBA SP except for console name removed from sticker
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | Most titles with sound options have said choices for simulated surround. A few others have a forced mono option instead.
The DSi and DSi XL have an option to force mono audio in the system settings.
|-
|-
| [[NDS:DS_Mods_Wiki|Nintendo DS Lite]]
|[[PSP:PSP_Mods_Wiki|Sony PSP]] (Non-Street/Go Series)
|align="left"| 5.2 V DC
| align="right" |[[File:PSP-1000.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 450 mA
| align="left" |2004
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
| rowspan="3" align="left" |Wolfson Microelectronics WM8973G (DAC)
|align="left"| USG-002
Custom sound processor
|align="left"| Unofficial 5 V USB cables
| rowspan="2" align="left" |
|align="left"| Proprietary connector
 
|align="left"| External
*Stereo
|align="left"| Resembles Mini-USB B to the point a mangled connector can be directly and "correctly" connected
*Binaural
| rowspan="2" align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |Most PSP software only offers plain stereo (except for the XMB's media player, which offers EQ presets available by short pressing the "sound" key only with external phones/speakers). PS1 software keeps original sound capabilities.
|-
|-
| [[NDS:DS_Mods_Wiki|Nintendo DSi series]]
|[[PSP:PSP_Mods_Wiki|Sony PSP-N1000 series]] (Go)
|align="left"| 4.6 V DC
| align="right" |[[File:PSP-Go.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 900 mA
| align="left" |2009
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
| align="left" |First console to support Bluetooth for general purpose audio output.
|align="left"| WAP-002
|align="left"| Still unofficially USB compatible
|align="left"| Proprietary connector
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| Originally invented for Nintendo/Buffalo WAP-001 Wi-Fi access point
|-
|-
| [[PSP:PSP_Mods_Wiki|Sony PSP]] (except N1000/Go)
|[[PSP:PSP Mods Wiki|Sony PSP-E1000 series]] (Street)
|align="left"| 5 V DC
|[[File:PSP Street.svg|frameless|200x200px]]
|align="left"| EP: 1500 mA, LP: 2000 mA
|2011
|align="left"| Negative ground
|
|align="left"| PSP-100 (two piece), PSP-103 (fixed cable)
*Mono (Built-In Speaker)
|align="left"| Third party USB-based cables; official USB charging (if console can boot, not on 1000 series)
*Stereo
|align="left"| EIAJ-02 (4.0/1.7 mm barrel)
*Binaural
|align="left"| External
|
|align="left"|
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
|This system only has a single speaker, but stereo out is available from the headphone jack
|-
|-
| [[PSP:PSP_Mods_Wiki|Sony PSP-N1000 series]] (Go)
|[[Wii:Wii Mods Wiki|Nintendo Wii]]
|align="left"| 5 V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Wii.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 1500 mA
| align="left" |2006
|align="left"| USB-A
| align="left" |Macronix 16-bit DSP
|align="left"| PSP-N100 (laptop style three piece), PSP-N104 (wall wart two piece)
| align="left" |
|align="left"| PC/generic USB power supply?
*Mono
|align="left"| Electrically USB-A, but in recessed position requiring a long and specially notched plug
 
|align="left"| External
*Stereo
|align="left"|  
*Dolby Pro Logic 2
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |The audio hardware on the Wii was shared with the GameCube, as the GPU is also similar.
|-
|-
| [[Wii:Wii Mods Wiki|Nintendo Wii]]
|[[Xbox 360:Xbox 360 Mods Wiki|Microsoft Xbox 360]]
|align="left"| 12V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Xbox 360 Vertical.png|299x299px]]
|align="left"| 3.7 A
| align="left" |2005
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
| rowspan="3" align="left" |Software-based audio processing by the CPU; no DSP is used.<ref>https://www.copetti.org/writings/consoles/xbox-360/#audio</ref>
|align="left"| RVL-002
Additional custom audio decoder for the proprietary XMA codec built into the south bridge.
|align="left"| ?
| rowspan="3" align="left" |
|align="left"| Proprietary connector
 
|align="left"| External
*Analog stereo
|align="left"|  
*Stereo LPCM (TOSLINK and HDMI)
*Dolby Digital 5.1 (TOSLINK and HDMI)
*Dolby Digital with WMA pro (TOSLINK and HDMI)
| rowspan="3" align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout%20with%20subwoofer.jpg 2.1]
*5.1
 
| align="left" |Original models require a suitable video cable or adapter for optical audio. Consoles with a Xenon, Elpis, or Opus motherboard have no HDMI port.
The video encoder chip was called ANA on launch consoles with Xenon motherboards, and upgraded to the HANA on Zephyr and newer motherboards.
|-
|-
| [[Xbox 360:Xbox 360 Mods Wiki|Microsoft Xbox 360]] (Xenon/Zephyr)
|[[Xbox 360:Xbox 360 Mods Wiki|Microsoft Xbox 360 S]]
|align="right"| [[File:Xbox 360 PAL power supply.jpg|200px]]
|[[File:Xbox 360 S.png|279x279px]]
|align="left"| Output: 12V DC, 5V DC
|2010
|align="left"| 16.5 A (12V), 1 A (5V)
|TOSLINK port is built into Xbox 360 S motherboards, thus not requiring a video cable or adapter.
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
The launch models of the 360 S featured a Trinity motherboard, which still had the HANA encoder chip like the HDMI-equipped original models. The later Corona & Waitsburg motherboards integrated the HANA into the south bridge (now named KSB).
|align="left"| DPSN-186CB-1A
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Proprietary connector with central and overline tabs
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| Forwards compatible
|-
|-
| [[Xbox 360:Xbox 360 Mods Wiki|Microsoft Xbox 360]] (Falcon/Opus)
|[[Xbox 360:Xbox 360 Mods Wiki|Microsoft Xbox 360 E]]
|align="left"| Output: 12V DC, 5V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Xbox_360_E.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 14.2 A (12V), 1 A (5V)
| align="left" | 2013
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
| align="left" | No built-in TOSLINK; digital audio can only be outputted through HDMI.
|align="left"| ?
All motherboards on this model have a KSB south bridge.
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Proprietary connector with overline tab
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| Forwards compatible
|-
|-
| [[Xbox 360:Xbox 360 Mods Wiki|Microsoft Xbox 360]] (Jasper/Kronos)
|[[PS3:PS3 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 3]]
|align="left"| Output: 12V DC, 5V DC
| align="right" |[[File:PS3-Fat.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 16.5 A (12V), 1 A (5V)
| align="left" |2006
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
| rowspan="3" align="left" |Software based audio processing by the CPU; no DSP is used.
|align="left"| ?
The GPU (NVIDIA & Sony RSX) handles the audio output.
|align="left"| ?
| rowspan="3" align="left" |
|align="left"| Proprietary connector with split overline tabs
*Mono
|align="left"| External
 
|align="left"|
*Stereo
|-
 
| [[Xbox 360:Xbox 360 Mods Wiki|Microsoft Xbox 360 S]]
*LPCM
|align="left"| Output: 12V DC, 5V DC
*AAC
|align="left"| 9.6 A (12V), 1 A (5V)
* Dolby Digital 5.1
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
*Dolby Digital Plus (HDMI)
|align="left"| PB-2121-03MX
*Dolby TrueHD* (HDMI)
|align="left"| ?
*DTS 5.1 (HDMI)
|align="left"| Proprietary double barrel jack connector
*DTS-HD* (HDMI)
|align="left"| External
| rowspan="3" align="left" |
|align="left"| ?
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
|-
 
| [[Xbox 360:Xbox 360 Mods Wiki|Microsoft Xbox 360 E]]
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
|align="left"| Output: 12V DC, 5V DC
 
|align="left"| 9.6 A (12V), 1 A (5V)
*5.1
|align="left"| N/A
 
|align="left"| DCGP FJ-1
*7.1
|align="left"| ?
| rowspan="3" align="left" | Audio output formats
|align="left"| Proprietary barrel jack connector
 
|align="left"| External
*A/V-Multi
|align="left"| ?
**Analog stereo
 
*TOSLINK
**LPCM 2ch 44.1 kHz, 48 kHz, 88 kHz, 176.4 kHz
**Dolby Digital 5.1
** DTS 5.1
**AAC
*HDMI
** LPCM 2ch, 5.1ch, 7.1ch 44.1 kHz, 48 kHz, 88 kHz, 96 kHz, 176.4 kHz, 192 kHz
**Dolby Digital 5.1
**DTS 5.1
**AAC
**DTS-HD Master Audio Bitstream*
** Dolby TrueHD Bitstream*
 
All models can decode Dolby TrueHD and (as of firmware 2.30 and later) DTS-HD Master Audio, to be output as LPCM. Output of the raw undecoded stream is limited to Slim and Super Slim models.<ref name=":0" />
|-
|-
| [[PS3:PS3 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 3]]
|[[PS3:PS3 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 3]] (CECH-2xxx/30xx)
|align="left"| Input: 100V-240V AC (most models), 220V-240V AC (early PAL models)
|[[File:PS3-Slim.png|200x200px]]
|align="left"| ?
|2009
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| C14 (original models), C7 non-polarized (Slim and Super Slim models)
|align="left"| Internal
|align="left"| Detailed information can be found [https://www.psdevwiki.com/ps3/Power_Supply here].
|-
|-
| [[PS3:PS3 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 3]] standard controller/keyboard/headset
|[[PS3:PS3 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 3]] (CECH-4xxx)
|align="left"| 5 V
|[[File:PS3-Super-Slim.png|200x200px]]
|align="left"| 2x 500 mA
|2012
|align="left"| USB-A
|align="left"| CECHZA1
|align="left"| PS3 console, compatible (handshaking) USB hosts
|align="left"| C7 to two USB-A
|align="left"| External
|align="left"|
|-
|-
| [[PS3:PS3 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 3]] Move controller
|align="left"| 5 V
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| CECH-ZCC1
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Barrel jack, unspecified
|align="left"| External
|align="left"|
|}
|}


==Eighth generation of consoles==
== Eighth generation of consoles==


{| class="wikitable"|-
{| class="wikitable" |-
! Console
!Console
!align="left"| Pictures
! align="left" |Pictures
!align="left"| Voltage
! align="left" |Year of Release
!align="left"| Amps
! align="left" |Audio Hardware
!align="left"| Polarity
! align="left" |Supported Audio Formats
!align="left"| Original PN
! align="left" |Supported Speaker Layouts
!align="left"| Replacement PN
! align="left" |Notes
!align="left"| Connection
!align="left"| Power Supply
!align="left"| Notes
|-
|-
| [[3DS:3DS_Mods_Wiki|Nintendo 3DS/2DS Series]] incl. New
|[[3DS:3DS_Mods_Wiki|Nintendo 3DS/2DS Series]] incl. New<ref>https://www.copetti.org/writings/consoles/nintendo-3ds/#audio</ref>
|align="left"| 4.6 V DC
| align="right" |[[File:3DS.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 900 mA
| align="left" |2011
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
| align="left" |CEVA TeakLite II (3DS mode)
|align="left"| WAP-002
"CSND" audio block (DS[i]/GBA backward compatibility)
|align="left"| Still unofficially USB compatible
| align="left" |
|align="left"| Proprietary connector
*Mono
|align="left"| External
*Stereo
|align="left"| Eventually replaced with cost-cutting revision (thinner cable)
*Pseudo-Surround
*Binaural
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" |"Surround" is simulated 3D sound. O2DS has mono speaker.
|-
|-
| [[Vita:Vita_Mods_Wiki|Sony PS Vita]]
|[[Vita:Vita_Mods_Wiki|Sony PS Vita]] (PCH-1xxx)
|align="left"| 5 V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Vita.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 1 A (?)
| align="left" |2011
|align="left"| USB-A
| rowspan="2" align="left" |Wolfson Microelectronics WM1803
|align="left"| PCH-ZAC1
| rowspan="3" align="left" |
|align="left"| Official USB charging
*Mono (Requires [https://www.gamebrew.org/wiki/Monaural_Vita custom plugin])
|align="left"| Electrically USB-A, but in recessed position requiring a long and specially notched plug
 
|align="left"| External
*Stereo
|align="left"| Connects to model specific data cable (1000 series: proprietary, 2000 series: micro-USB B)
| rowspan="3" align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[Vita:Vita_Mods_Wiki|Sony PS Vita TV]]
|[[Vita:Vita_Mods_Wiki|Sony PS Vita TV]] & [[Vita:Vita_Mods_Wiki|Sony PlayStation TV]]
|align="left"| 5 V DC
| align="right" |[[File:PSTV.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 2000 mA
| rowspan="2" align="left" |2013
|align="left"| Negative ground
| align="left" | ?
|align="left"| PDEL-100
|align="left"| PSP power bricks and their equivalents
|align="left"| EIAJ-02 (4.0/1.7 mm barrel)
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| Recycled from developer Vita
|-
|-
| [[WiiU:Wii U Mods Wiki|Nintendo Wii U]]
|[[Vita:Vita_Mods_Wiki|Sony PS Vita]] (PCH-20xx)
|align="left"| 15V DC
|[[File:Vita 2000.png|200x200px]]
|align="left"| 5 A
| Wolfson Microelectronics WM1803 (Early models)
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
Conexant CX20902 (Late models)
|align="left"| WUP-002
| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| Proprietary connector
|align="left"| External
|align="left"| Connector is very similar to the original Wii but is not compatible (colored yellow for identification). Unofficially<ref>[https://www.nintendolife.com/forums/wii-u/wii_u_multi_voltage]</ref> multivoltage.
|-
|-
| [[WiiU:Wii U Mods Wiki|Nintendo Wii U GamePad]]
|[[WiiU:Wii U Mods Wiki|Nintendo Wii U]]
|align="left"| 4.75 V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Wii_U.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 1.6 A
| align="left" |2012
|align="left"| N/A, connector is keyed
| align="left" |Custom DSP inside the ATI Latte GPU<ref>https://www.copetti.org/writings/consoles/wiiu/#audio</ref>
|align="left"| WUP-011
 
|align="left"| Still unofficially USB compatible
| align="left" |
|align="left"| Proprietary connector
*Mono
|align="left"| External
*Stereo
|align="left"| Just barely enlarged 2/3DS/i/XL connector. Unofficially multivoltage.
*5.1 linear PCM
*Analog stereo
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout%20with%20subwoofer.jpg 2.1]
*5.1
| align="left" | DSP is integrated into the GPU, similarly to the Wii and Gamecube.
|-
|-
| [[PS4:PS4 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 4 (original)]]
|[[PS4:PS4 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 4]] (CUH-1xxx)
|align="left"| Input: 100-240V AC
| align="right" |[[File:PS4.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |2013
|align="left"| ?
| rowspan="3" align="left" |Custom AMD TrueAudio
|align="left"| ?
| rowspan="2" align="left" |
|align="left"| ?
*Mono
|align="left"| C7 non-polarized
 
|align="left"| Internal
*Stereo
|align="left"|  
| rowspan="2" align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
 
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[PS4:PS4 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 4 (slim)]]
|[[PS4:PS4 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 4]] (CUH-2xxx)
|align="left"| Input: 100-240V AC
| align="right" | [[File:PS4_Slim.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |2016
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" | The optical audio port was removed on the PS4 Slim models.
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| C7 non-polarized
|align="left"| Internal
|align="left"|  
|-
|-
| [[PS4:PS4 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 4 Pro]]
|[[PS4:PS4 Mods Wiki|Sony PlayStation 4 Pro]]
|align="left"| Input: 100-240V AC
| align="right" |[[File:PS4_Pro.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| 2016
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |  
|align="left"| ?
*Mono
|align="left"| ?
*Stereo
|align="left"| C17 (CUH-7000 and -7100 models), C7 non-polarized (CUH-7200 models)
*Dolby Digital
|align="left"| Internal
*DTS
|align="left"|
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout%20with%20subwoofer.jpg 2.1]
* 5.1
*7.1
| align="left" | When setting your console up, as you’ll need to change it to set your sound from the standard PCM to bitstreaming Dolby Digital or DTS. The PS4 Pro also only supports Dolby Atmos for compatible Blu-ray movies, it does not support Atmos for games.
|-
|-
| [[Xbox One:Xbox One Mods Wiki|Microsoft Xbox One]]
|[[Xbox One:Xbox One Mods Wiki|Microsoft Xbox One]]
|align="left"| Input: 100-127V AC (JP/US), Output: 12V DC, 5V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Xbox_One.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 16.5 A (12V), 1 A (5V)
| align="left" |2013
|align="left"| PB-2201-02MX
| rowspan="3" align="left" |SHAPE Audio Processor
|align="left"| ?
| rowspan="3" align="left" |
|align="left"| ?
*Mono
|align="left"| Proprietary connector, same as the 360 S
*Stereo
|align="left"| External
*Dolby Atmos
|align="left"|
*DTS:X
| rowspan="3" align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout%20with%20subwoofer.jpg 2.1]
*5.1
*7.1
| align="left" | ?
|-
|-
| [[Xbox One:Xbox One Mods Wiki|Microsoft Xbox One S]]
|[[Xbox One:Xbox One Mods Wiki|Microsoft Xbox One S]]
|align="left"| Input: 100-240V AC
| align="right" |[[File:Xbox_One_S.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |2016
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" | ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| C7 non-polarized
|align="left"| Internal
|align="left"|
|-
|-
| [[Xbox One:Xbox One Mods Wiki|Microsoft Xbox One X]]
|[[Xbox One:Xbox One Mods Wiki|Microsoft Xbox One X]]
|align="left"| Input: 100-240V AC
| align="right" |[[File:Xbox_One_X.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |2017
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" | ?  
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| C7 non-polarized
|align="left"| Internal
|align="left"|
|-
|-
| Nintendo Switch
|Nintendo Switch (all models)
|align="left"| Input: 100-240V AC, Output: 5V DC, 15V DC
| align="right" |[[File:Switch.png|200px]]
|align="left"| 1.5A (5V), 2.6A (15V)
| align="left" |2017
|align="left"| N/A, connector is reversible
| align="left" |Realtek ALC5639
|align="left"| HAC-002
| align="left" |
|align="left"| ?
*Undocked: Linear PCM 2.0 ch stereo speakers (with pseudo-surround)
|align="left"| USB-C
*Docked: Linear PCM 5.1 ch
|align="left"| External
| align="left" |
|align="left"| Not fully USB-PD compliant. Compatible 15V power supply required for dock.
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout%20with%20subwoofer.jpg 2.1]
*5.1
| align="left" | ?


|}
|}
Line 1,541: Line 1,815:
==Ninth generation of consoles==
==Ninth generation of consoles==


{| class="wikitable"|-
{| class="wikitable" |-
! Console
!Console
!align="left"| Pictures
! align="left" |Pictures
!align="left"| Voltage
! align="left" |Year of Release
!align="left"| Amps
! align="left" |Audio Hardware
!align="left"| Polarity
! align="left" |Supported Audio Formats
!align="left"| Original PN
! align="left" |Supported Speaker Layouts
!align="left"| Replacement PN
! align="left" |Notes
!align="left"| Connection
!align="left"| Power Supply
!align="left"| Notes
|-
|-
| Sony PlayStation 5
|Sony PlayStation 5 (All models)
|align="left"| ?
| align="right" |[[File:PS5 Disc Edition.png|frameless|362x362px]][[File:PS5.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |2020
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" | Tempest Engine audio chip
|align="left"| ?
| align="left" |
|align="left"| ?
* Mono
|align="left"| C7 non-polarized
*Stereo
|align="left"| Internal
*Custom Tempest Engine 3D Audio
|align="left"|  
*Dolby Atmos & DTS:X (Blu-ray video & UHD Blu-ray video)
 
*7.1 surround sound
| align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout%20with%20subwoofer.jpg 2.1]
*5.1
*7.1
| align="left" |The PS5 does not support Dolby Atmos, instead using Sony's tempest engine, which does not support high channel speakers.
|-
|-
| Microsoft Xbox Series S
|Microsoft Xbox Series S
|align="left"| ?
| align="right" |
|align="left"| ?
[[File:Xbox_Series_S.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
| rowspan="2" align="left" |2020
|align="left"| ?
| rowspan="2" align="left" |CFPU2 processor, MOVAD Opus decoder, & Logan audio engine
|align="left"| ?
| rowspan="2" align="left" |  
|align="left"| C7 non-polarized
*Mono
|align="left"| Internal
*Stereo
|align="left"|  
* Custom Project Acoustics 3D Audio
* Dolby Atmos
*DTS:X
* 7.1 surround sound
| rowspan="2" align="left" |
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Mono_layout.jpg 1.0]
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout.jpg 2.0]
*[https://consolemods.org/wiki/File:Stereo%20layout%20with%20subwoofer.jpg 2.1]
* 5.1
*7.1
*7.1.2
| rowspan="2" align="left" |The Xbox Series X and Xbox Series S are the first consoles ever to enable gaming in both Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos.
|-
|-
| Microsoft Xbox Series X
|Microsoft Xbox Series X
|align="left"| ?
| align="right" |[[File:Xbox_Series_X.png|200px]]
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| ?
|align="left"| C7 non-polarized
|align="left"| Internal
|align="left"|  


|}
|}


==References==
==External links==
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_ircUCLxeE "(Video) RetroRGB - Surround Sound - Music First"].
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0yHzDiJRY0w "(Video) RetroRGB - CRT's + Magnetically Shielded Speakers"].
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g9vZ6IsSmRs "(Video) Mythic Resonance - Surround Sound On Retro Video Game Consoles"].
*[https://www.audioholics.com/audio-technologies/surroud-sound-formats "AV Receiver Surround Sound Formats Comparison (by Gene DellaSala, 2016)"].
*[http://3daudio.info/gamesound/ "Digital Sound and Music in Video Games"].
 
[[Category:ConsoleMods Wiki]]


* [https://www.retrorgb.com/quality-psus-for-classic-consoles.html "Quality PSU’s For Classic Consoles"].
<references />
* [https://www.firebrandx.com/triads.html "Triad Brand Replacement Power Supplies"]. Retrieved 2009-09-05.

Latest revision as of 13:39, 30 November 2024

When it comes to retro gaming, many enthusiasts tend to focus on graphics and gameplay, but sound can be just as important in creating an immersive experience. From the humble beep of the first video game console to the modern-day surround sound systems, sound capabilities have come a long way in video game consoles. This article aims to provide an overview of the various sound formats and standards used in video game consoles, from mono to stereo and beyond, as well as to offer tips and recommendations for getting the best sound performance out of each console. By comparing the sound capabilities of different consoles, players can make informed decisions on how to optimize their gaming experience.

Exclamation-triangle-fill.svgDRAFT (WORK IN PROGRESS ARTICLE - PLEASE DO NOT RELY ON THE INFORMATION BELOW UNTIL MARKED AS COMPLETED)



Explanation of "Channels"

If you’re putting together a console setup for audio, there are some numbers that you’ll notice like 2.1, 5.1, 7.2.2 and so on. These numbers represent "channels", with each channel normally - but not always - corresponding to one physical speaker. (For example, there are plenty of exceptions such as soundbars and surround-sound headsets, so "channels" and "speakers" are not synonymous. While 2.1 might seem to indicate three separate speakers, this may not always be the case).

  • The first number (for example, the "5" in a 5.1 setup) defines how many primary channels there are in a setup, at ear level. Usually (but again, not always) this number also refers to the number of regular speakers in the setup. So for example, a standard 5.1 system will normally use five speakers: Front Left, Centre, Front Right, Surround Left and Surround Right. Each channel can receive a separate audio signal. So if the user is playing a game that has its audio mixed in 5.1 surround, the dialogue will probably be sent to the centre speaker, with the other speakers playing audio relative to the action on the screen. This will hopefully add greater immersion and give a more convincing experience.
  • The second number stands for the number of LFE (Low Frequency Effects) channels in a setup, which are commonly reproduced by subwoofer speakers. The woofers on regular speakers are not usually powerful enough to effectively reproduce very low-frequency bass sounds. So having the second number displayed separately (for example, the "1" in a 5.1 setup) indicates that this is not a normal speaker. For extra bass, some systems might even support x.2 or even x.4 speaker configurations.
  • The third number (for example, the last "2" in a modern 7.2.2 home theatre setup) is a relatively new innovation, and defines how many overhead or height channels there are, which are normally reproduced by ceiling-mounted or in-ceiling speakers. If your system has a third number, this indicates that it supports object-based surround sound formats such as Dolby Atmos or DTS:X, where sounds are recorded as individual objects in 3D space instead of traditional channels. However, it's not strictly necessary for an object-based setup to have actual ceiling speakers. Some standard speakers (or soundbars) have built-in upward-firing speakers that bounce audio off the ceiling, to simulate the effect that the audio is actually coming from above you.

Analog multichannel sound can be implemented as:

  • a discrete system, where each channel is delivered independently; (for example, a 5.1 system with 5 or 6 RCA connectors is, at least at that point in the chain, a discrete system)

or

  • a matrixed system, where algorithms are used to put multiple channels worth of sound into a lesser amount of physical channels (such as the two stereo RCA cables that were already commonly in use with most audio equipment from the 1970s through to the 1990s)

In digital audio, these terms are less commonly used, but comparable approaches are used depending on circumstances.

Disclaimer

This article is written with the intention of providing practical advice and tips to the average retro gamer who wishes to improve their console audio experience. While accuracy and up-to-date information are essential, the article is not meant to be excessively technical or comprehensive.

For example, in the context of video game consoles, the term "mono" typically refers to the console's output being a single, mixed audio channel, as opposed to true monophonic sound. For instance, the original Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) is sometimes referred to as a "mono" console, despite featuring two pulse wave channels, one triangle wave channel, one noise channel, and a delta modulation channel. Similarly, the ColecoVision used a SN76489 sound chip, which offered four channels, including three tone channels for music and a noise channel.

While channels can be utilized in combination to create complex sounds and music, the output is merged into a single channel. Describing these consoles as anything other than "mono" might confuse the average user, who might assume that adding additional speakers would enhance their audio setup. Therefore, unless a console can output audio in stereo, it will be regarded as a "mono" console.

Sound System Year Introduced to Home Market Explanation Use in Retro-Gaming context
Mono sound logo.png Mono 1899 “Monaural sound” is simply a single audio channel. A mono signal can be sent from the source device to one, two or many speakers, and all the speakers will play the same sound regardless. While stereo signals can create the impression of hearing sounds from different locations/directions, mono cannot. Prior to the Turbo-Grafx16, all home video game consoles [1] either sent a mono audio signal to the television, or (in the 1st gen) utilised beepers and built-in speakers to produce simple action sounds. In some instances, stereo mods for these older consoles are available. (e.g. Atari 2600) [2]

In some modern consoles, the ability to enable mono audio (i.e. combining all audio channels into one) can be enabled as an accessibility option for players with single-sided deafness. [3]

Stereo-Audio-Sound-Signal-Round.png Stereo 1958 While mono signals are recorded and played back using a single audio channel, stereo sounds are recorded and played back using two discrete audio channels.

Stereo speaker setups are usually laid out in either a 2.0 (no subwoofer) or a 2.1 (with subwoofer) configuration - with a front left speaker and a front right speaker.

Since its introduction with the Turbo-Grafx 16 [4], Stereo is still the way that the majority of gamers experience sound in video games, although soundbars and surround sound headphones are projected to continue growing in popularity.
512px-Qs-r4-channel-stereo.svg.png Quadrophonic Sound 1971 This format had brief popularity in the 1970s, using two front and two rear speakers (all discrete channels). Most quadrophonic musical recordings were extracted from the original stereo mix, although some were mastered in four channels. Early Playstation 3 units (CECHA/B/C/E) are capable of reading Super Audio CDs (SACDs) which support Quadraphonic sound [5]. Regular SACD players with multichannel analogue outputs have been confirmed to be compatible with 1970s quadrophonic receivers, [6], although whether the PS3 supports this method of output has not been confirmed.

No confirmed use of quadrophonic sound in the audio mixes of any actual video games. By the time game consoles were beginning to move away from use of piezo beepers and built-in speakers, in favour of actually sending audio to the television for output (e.g. the Atari 2600 in 1977), quadrophonic sound had already faded from the mainstream.

Dolby Stereo Logo.png Dolby Stereo 1975 Dolby Stereo was developed in the 1970s for cinema sound systems, and was later adapted for the home as "Dolby Surround". [7] N/A - See Dolby Surround.
Headphones logo.png Binaural Audio 1978 Binaural sound is a technique that involves recording audio (usually using two microphones) in such a way that when the user listens to it back, it produces a 3D effect from the stereo signal. The effect arguably works best when listened to using a pair of noise-cancelling headphones.

Although binaural recording techniques have existed since the 1800s, it wasn't until 1978 that Lou Reed released the first commercially produced binaural pop record, "Street Hassle". [8]

When done correctly, the effect works very well with headphones and VR-based systems (such as Playstation VR).

The technique has also been used in certain games for the PSP and 3DS - for example, the dialogue in Corpse Party and Book of Shadows were both recorded using binaural recording. [9]

Yesterday spectral uncompressed.png LPCM (Linear Pulse Code Modulation) 1982 Not a brand of sound format - LPCM refers to raw, uncompressed sound data. LPCM can support any number of potential audio channels, from mono upwards.

LPCM's first home implementation was the lossless encoding of sound data in Audio CDs. [10]

The PlayStation 3 was first console to offer real-time 7.1 LPCM as an option for sound. Any modern AVR or pre-amp should be able to process these signals, but LPCM cannot be used for object-based sound. [11]
Dolby Surround Logo.png Dolby Surround 1982 Dolby Surround (i.e. "matrixed surround") was the first multi-channel surround decoding technology to be widely available for use with analogue movie formats and to a lesser extent, home video game consoles.

The format produces four audio channels (Left Front, Right Front, Centre and a single rear surround channel), but they're not discrete. The channels are extracted using a specially encoded signal that runs across the existing two stereo (red and white) RCA cables that were in use with a lot of customer audio equipment of this era.

In short, the user gets a centre, a front left and right and mono rear.

To access 4.0 surround (i.e., four channels), the user would need an AV amplifier capable of decoding and separating the regular stereo outputs to produce the pseudo-surround sound effect. Discrete left and right sounds still go to the Front Left and Front Right speakers, as per normal Stereo. However, the processor uses one of the front channels to carry a mono rear channel on its inverted phase - there maybe be two or more Rear surround speakers, the mono sound is played equally between them all at the same time. The other front channel is used to carry a centre channel on its inverted phase.

If the user’s amplifier could send audio signals below a certain frequency to a subwoofer (using a low-pass filter), the user also could access 4.1 surround. A setup like this would also be backwards-compatible with older formats – if the user had a regular 2.0 stereo setup, the Left and Right signals would play as normal, and if the console was plugged into an older CRT with a mono speaker, all the audio would be routed into that single channel.

THX logo.png THX 1983 THX is not its own sound format, but rather a rigid set of standards, originally intended to ensure that the theatrical experience of a movie was as close as possible to the director's intentions.

In the realm of home consumer hardware and VHS/DVDs/video games, THX certification signified that the mastering and duplication process was inspected by THX technicians and held to certain standards.

Approximately 40 games were THX certified, mainly on the PlayStation 2, original XBox, Gamecube, PlayStation 3 and PC. [12]
Dolby-Surround-Pro-Logic 1.png Dolby Pro Logic 1 1987 While Dolby Surround added a mono surround channel to the usual front left and front right - this was improved with Dolby Pro Logic 1, which added a centre channel, and used a more advanced algorithm to extract the extra channels, as well as improving the movement and discreteness between them. Note: *** Did Dolby Surround or Dolby Pro Logic 1 introduce the centre channel? TBC *** Also TBC - did any consoles explicitly support Pro Logic 1, or for our purposes, does Dolby Surround = Dolby Pro Logic 1?
QSound Labs logo.png QSound 1991 QSound is a format that provides greater separation between sound sources in a stereo mix, producing a kind of "fake" surround sound effect using only two speakers. The effect is built into the recording not the decoding, so all that is needed to access QSound is a stereo-capable receiver with two outputs. [13] According to Andrew Elmore (medium.com)[14] , QSound is utilised on several PlayStation games and is the only 3D audio option employed on the Sega Mega CD, Saturn, and Dreamcast. QSound is a boon to Sega gamers as less than 20 games are confirmed to have used actual multi-channel Dolby Surround sound. [15]
RSS Logo.png Roland Surround Space 1991 A 3D "sound space" technology created by Roland Corporation (similar to QSound), which attempts to create a "3D sound" using two regular speakers in a stereo configuration.

It does not use speakers which "surround" the user, but attempts to direct sound around the room to give the illusion of depth.

RSS was used in some video games of the early 1990s, but was less successful than competitors such as QSound or Dolby Surround (which were themselves a relative niche market) From a Sega perspective, it was supported by a couple of Mega CD games and less than a dozen Mega LD games. [16]
Dolby-Digital.png Dolby Digital (originally Dolby Stereo Digital) 1992 As technology progressed, it became easier to record multi-channel sound natively. Dolby Digital featured 6 discrete channels of audio in the ubiquitous 5.1 setup (5 speakers, 1 subwoofer). The first video game console to use 5.1 Dolby Digital encoding was the original Xbox, which was released by Microsoft in 2001. The Xbox was the first console to feature an optical digital audio output, which allowed for high-quality digital audio output, including support for Dolby Digital 5.1 surround sound. Many Xbox games took advantage of this capability, offering immersive and detailed sound design that helped to enhance the gaming experience. [17]
1280px-DTS logo.png DTS Digital Surround 1993 The original DTS system was a CD-based digital sound format that synced the compressed audio on a CD with whatever video frame was on-screen at a given time.

The theatrical version did not feature a discrete subwoofer, with a low-pass filter being applied to the surround channels instead and the subwoofer extracted from them. The home version however offered true 5.1 channel audio, with a discrete subwoofer.

Sony's PlayStation 3 and Microsoft's Xbox 360 are capable of DTS decoding and output via TOSLINK or HDMI as LPCM. However, HDMI output on the Xbox 360 is only found on the "Elite" model and newer models available since mid-2007, with the release of the Zephyr motherboard revision. Also, the Xbox 360 cannot decode DTS from DTS audio CDs.

PlayStation 3 consoles can bitstream DTS over HDMI, but cannot decode audio from DTS audio CDs. The newer "slim" models are able to bitstream DTS-HD MA as well, but also cannot decode audio from DTS CDs. (Link) (Note: need to confirm that the version of DTS applied on the PS3 is same as Jurassic Park in 1993).

Dts-es logo.png DTS: ES 1999 DTS: ES came out at the same time as Dolby Surround EX in the theatres and processed the centre surround in the same way (Note: expand on this) Confirmed supported on PS3 and Xbox 360 (expand on this)
Dolby Pro Logic II.png Dolby Pro Logic 2 2000 Similar to Pro Logic 1 but with the addition of stereo surround channels. Better processing is taking place that tells the surround channels how to steer the sound around the user. Pro Logic II systems also feature a mode designed specifically for video gaming, and was frequently used in game titles for Sony's PlayStation 2, Nintendo's GameCube and Wii as an alternative to digital surround formats such as Dolby Digital, or DTS. Game mode is similar to Movie mode, except it redirects more bass to the LFE channel. (link)
Dts neo 6 logo.png DTS Neo:6 2000 From an analog perspective, DTS Neo-6 replicated what Dolby Pro Logic 2 accomplished from a stereo connection (expand) TBC - Neo:6 may not require a given console to explicitly "support" it, as this is a post-processing format. https://www.quora.com/What-is-DTS-Neo-6
Dolby-Pro-Logic-IIx.png Dolby Pro Logic IIx 2003 Can take two-channel stereo, Dolby Surround, and Dolby Digital 5.1 source material and then upscale it to 6.1 or 7.1 channel surround sound. TBC - is this another post-processing format? Couldn't find any consoles incorporating Dolby Pro Logic IIx signal processing.
DTSHD High Definition Audio logo.jpg DTS-HD High Definition Audio 2004 This was DTS's equivalent of Dolby Digital Plus. Confirmed supported by PS3 (expand!)
Dts-interactive-logo.png DTS Interactive 2005 DTS (DTS Interactive) had a four-channel format for the home that used Left, Right, Left Surround, and Right Surround speakers. This was the only discrete format (beyond Stereo) that the PS2 could process in real time, and a few games used this.
Dolby TrueHD.png Dolby TrueHD 2006 Continued improvement to the number of channels as well as maximum bit-rate and sample-rate. (confirm!) Unlike most audio formats, Dolby TrueHD is 100 percent lossless. This means that what you hear is bit-for-bit identical to the master recording. Confirmed to be supported by PS3 (more details TBC)
DTS-HD.png DTS-HD Master Audio 2007 This was DTS' equivalent to Dolby's TrueHD, and was also a lossless format. Confirmed to be supported by PS3 (more details TBC)
Dolby Pro Logic IIz.png Dolby Pro Logic IIz 2009 Expands on Pro Logic IIx with the addition of a height component, creating front height channels above the front left and right speakers, expanding a 5.1 or 7.1 system to 7.1 Height or 9.1. It identifies spatial cues in low-level, uncorrelated information, such as ambience and effects like rain or wind in the side and rear surround channels, and directs it to the front height speakers. The channels it adds are matrixed, not discrete. (link) ?
Dts neo x logo.png DTS Neo:X 2009 Replicates what Dolby Pro Logic 2z accomplished from a stereo connection (expand!) TBC
Dolby Atmos logo.png Dolby Atmos 2014 Dolby Atmos supports up to 128 audio objects (i.e. sounds) that are independent of a channel assignment. Sounds can be created independently and mapped to an exact specific location. The user can hear a spatially-accurate sound effect, no matter where they are sitting in the room. Dolby Atmos can use up to 24 independent speaker locations plus a subwoofer, and typically uses overhead speakers. The first console to have Dolby Atmos enabled (via a downloadable app) was the Xbox One (more detail TBC)
DTS X B&W.png DTS:X 2015 DTS:X is DTS’s take on Dolby Atmos and uses object-based sounds and height channels in the same fashion as Dolby Atmos. Confirmed supported by XBox One (expand!)

Speaker Layouts

Speaker Layout Diagram
No speakers (blank template) Floorplan.jpg
1.0 Mono layout.jpg
2.0 Stereo layout.jpg
2.1 Stereo layout with subwoofer.jpg
3.1 3.1 setup.jpg
4.0 (Dolby Surround) Dolby Surround 4.0.jpg
5.1 IMAGE TBC
6.1 IMAGE TBC
7.1 IMAGE TBC
7.2 IMAGE TBC
7.1.2 IMAGE TBC
9.1 IMAGE TBC
9.1.2 IMAGE TBC
10.2 IMAGE TBC
13.1 IMAGE TBC

First generation of consoles

Console Pictures Year of Release Audio Hardware Supported Audio Formats Supported Speaker Layouts Notes
Magnavox Odyssey Magnavox Odyssey.png 1972 None N/A N/A The console cannot generate audio.
Magnavox Odyssey 100 S-l1600.jpg 1975 Piezzo beeper (Built-in speaker) Mono 1.0 The console didn't send audio to the tv, instead using an internal piezzo beeper which emitted primitive action sounds through a built-in speaker - for example, a "blip" when the tennis ball is hit by a player's paddle, or when the hockey puck hits the borders of the playing area.
Magnavox Odyssey 200 S-l1600 (1).jpg 1975 Piezzo beeper (Built-in speaker) Mono 1.0 The console's piezo beeper operated in the same manner as the Odyssey 100. The Odyssey 200 added an extra game called SMASH (i.e. squash); the buzzer would bleep whenever the ball hit the front "wall".
Magnavox Odyssey 300 Odyssey-300.jpg 1976 G.I. AY-3-8500 chip (Built-in speaker) Mono 1.0 As before, during play, a different audio tone (little more than a few bleeps and bloops) is generated each time the ball hits a player, a wall, or a point is scored. No provisions are made to turn the sound on or off, which emanates from a speaker in the Odyssey console itself.
Magnavox Odyssey 400 S-l1600 (2).jpg 1976 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Magnavox Odyssey 500 Odyssey500.jpg 1976 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Magnavox Odyssey 4305 Odyssey 4305 (1 of 8).JPG 1976/1977 ? Mono 1.0 The Odyssey 4305 is a 19” television (based on the chassis of the Magnavox T991 television) but with a built-in Odyssey. As with most CRTs of this era, the sound was an analog signal produced from small speakers installed inside the chassis. It produced sound in mono and action sounds were similar to other Odyssey series consoles.
Magnavox Odyssey 2000 Magnavox-Odyssey-2000-FL.jpg 1977 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Magnavox Odyssey 3000 Magnavox Odyssey 3000.jpg 1977 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Magnavox Odyssey 4000 Magnavox Odyssey 4000.jpg 1977 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Philips Odyssey 200 Philips ODYSSEY200 Konsole.jpg 1976 (released concurrently with U.S. Odyssey 200) ? Mono 1.0 ?
Philips Odyssey 2001 Philips Odyssey 2001.png 1977 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Philips Odyssey 2100 Philips Odyssey 2100.jpg 1978 ? Mono 1.0 ?
TV Tennis Electrotennis (Epoch) TV Tennis Electrotennis.jpg 1975 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Atari Home Pong (Model C-100) S-l1600 (3).jpg 1976 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Atari Super Pong (Model C-140) S-l1600 (4).jpg 1976 ? Mono 1.0 The console had a speaker built into the main unit, that could output a simple "bloop" noise every time the ball was hit.
Coleco Telstar ColecoTelstar.jpg 1976 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Coleco Telstar Classic Coleco Telstar Classic (1976) 2.jpg 1976 ? Mono. 1.0 ?
Coleco Telstar Deluxe (AKA World of Sports) Coleco Telstar Deluxe.jpg 1977 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Coleco Telstar Ranger S-l1600 (5).jpg 1977 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Coleco Telstar Alpha Coleco Telstar Alpha.jpg 1977 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Coleco Telstar Colormatic Coleco Telstar Colormatic.jpg 1977 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Coleco Telstar Regent Coleco Telstar Regent.jpg 1977 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Coleco Telstar Sportsman TBC 1978 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Coleco Telstar Combat! Telstar Combat.jpg 1977 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Coleco Telstar Colortron Coleco-Telstar-Colortron.jpg 1978 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Coleco Telstar Marksman Coleco Telstar Marksman Tietokonemuseo.jpg 1978 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Coleco Telstar Galaxy Coleco-Telstar-Gemini-power.jpeg 1977 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Coleco Telstar Gemini Coleco-Telstar-Gemini-power.jpeg 1977 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Coleco Telstar Arcade Coleco-Telstar-Arcade-Pongside-L.jpg 1977 ? Mono 1.0 ?
Nintendo Color TV - Game 6 Nintendo-Color-TV-Game-Blockbreaker-FL.jpg 1977 ? Mono 1.0 ?

Second generation of consoles

Console Pictures Year of Release Audio Hardware Supported Audio Formats Supported Speaker Layouts Notes
Atari 2600 Atari-2600.png 1977 Atari TIA

Mono (Stock)

Stereo (Modded)

1.0 "Stereo" mods exist which split the TIA's two audio channels into left and right audio; however although this provides an enhanced audio experience for Atari 2600 users, true stereo effects are limited. Early games like ‘Combat’ were designed with the assumption that the 2600 would have two separate built-in speakers for each player’s sounds. However Atari removed this feature, and most of the library outputs music/effects in mono.

The stereo mod for the 2600 allows for potential stereo sound effects in newer homebrew games designed with stereo in mind. However, games without stereo programming may exhibit stereo-like effects or remain similar to their original mono output. Some games prioritize sound effects, causing them to come from random sides on a stereo-modded console. A prototype game called Sonar did demonstrate proper stereo utilization however. [18]

Magnavox Odyssey 2 Magnavox Odyssey2.png 1978 Intel 8244 Mono 1.0 ?
Philips Videopac G7000 (European release of Odyssey 2) Videopac-pete-screen-800px.jpg 1978 Intel 8245 Mono 1.0 ?
Mattel Intellivision Intellivision.png 1979 General Instruments AY-3-8914 Mono 1.0 ?
Mattel Intellivision II Intellivision II.png 1983 General Instruments AY-3-8914 Mono 1.0 ?
Coleco ColecoVision ColecoVision.png 1982 Texas Instruments SN76489AN

Mono (Stock)

Stereo (Modded)

1.0 ?
Atari 5200 (Four controller port model) * Atari-5200.png 1982 Atari POKEY Mono 1.0 ?
Atari 5200 (Two controller port model) * Atari-5200-'83.png 1983 Atari POKEY Mono 1.0 ?
GCE/MB Vectrex Vectrex.png 1982 General Instruments AY-3-8912

Mono (Stock)

Stereo (Modded)

1.0 (Stock)

2.0 (Modded)

Vectrex uses a General Instruments AY-3-8912 sound chip to deliver surprisingly good music and sound effects, as well as limited voice synthesis, via a 3-inch built-in paper cone speaker. A mod is available to add compatibility with external stereo speakers.


Third generation of consoles

Console Pictures Year of Release Audio Hardware Supported Audio Formats Supported Speaker Layouts Notes
Nintendo Entertainment System (US) NES.png 1985 Ricoh 2A03 Mono 1.0 "Stereo" mods exist, but these simply divide some of the 2A03's audio channels between left and right.
Nintendo Entertainment System (PAL) Neseuropean version.jpg 1986 Ricoh 2A07 Mono 1.0 "Stereo" mods exist, but these simply divide some of the 2A03's audio channels between left and right.
Famicom Famicom.png 1983 Ricoh 2A03 Mono 1.0 "Stereo" mods exist, but these simply divide some of the 2A03's audio channels between left and right.
Famicom Disk System DiskSystem.png 1986 Ricoh 2C33 Mono 1.0 The Famicom Disk System generates an extra wavetable audio channel which is mixed in with the Famicom's internal audio
Twin Famicom TurboTwinFamicom.png 1986 Ricoh 2A03 + Ricoh 2C33 Mono 1.0 ?
Sega SG-1000 SG-1000.png 1983 Texas Instruments SN76489AN Mono 1.0 ?
Sega SG-1000 II SG-1000II.png 1984 Texas Instruments SN76489AN (early revision)
Sega 315-5066 (later revision)
Mono 1.0 ?
Sega Mark III MarkIII.png 1985 Sega 315-5124 Mono 1.0 ?
Sega Master System SMS.png 1986 Sega 315-5124 Mono 1.0 ?
Atari 7800 Atari-7800.png 1986 Atari TIA Mono 1.0 "Stereo" mods exist which split the TIA's two audio channels between left and right audio
Casio PV-1000 PV1000.png 1983 NEC D65010G031 Mono 1.0 ?
Epoch Super Cassette Vision Super Cassette Vision.png 1984 NEC D1771C Mono 1.0 ?
Amstrad GX4000 GX4000.png 1990 Microchip Technology AY-3-8912 Mono 1.0 ?

Fourth generation of consoles

Console Pictures Year of Release Audio Hardware Supported Audio Formats Supported Speaker Layouts Notes
PC Engine PC-Engine.png 1987 Hudson HuC6280
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Roland Surround Space (RSS)
Although it only shipped with an RF port, the PC Engine is notable as the first home gaming console to offer stereo audio, via the expansion port, but it must be amplified externally. To achieve stereo audio, as well as composite video, the user needed an add-on such as the NEC PC Engine CD. [19]

There were also several titles on the PC-Engine that used RSS, including Dracula X and Ys IV. [20]

NEC PC Engine CD PCEngineCDROM.jpg 1988 OKI M5205 (ADPCM)
Red Book CD audio
  • Mono
  • Stereo
See above
NEC TurboGrafx 16 TurboGrafx16.png 1989 Hudson HuC6280
  • Mono
  • Stereo

Although it shipped with only an RF port, the TurboGrafx-16 is notable as the first home gaming console, released outside Japan, to offer stereo audio. Amplification was implemented similarly to the Japanese PC Engine, with the TurboBooster add-on allowing for stereo audio and composite video. [21]

Unlike earlier consoles (from the Atari 2600 to the NES), which subsequently received homebrew hardware modifications to allow stereo audio, the TurboGrafx-16/PC Engine had games which were intentionally programmed with different audio channels, allowing for stereo audio effects where specific sounds or music elements emanated from either the right of the left speaker.

NEC TurboGrafx-CD * TurboGrafxCD.png 1989 OKI M5205 (ADPCM)
Red Book CD audio
  • Mono
  • Stereo
?
NEC SuperGrafx SuperGrafx.png 1989 Hudson HuC6280
  • Mono
  • Stereo
?
NEC TurboExpress/PC Engine GT TurboExpress.png 1990 Hudson HuC6280
  • Mono
  • Stereo
The system only has a single speaker but stereo out is available from the headphone jack
NEC TurboDuo/PC Engine Duo TurboDuo.png 1991 Hudson HuC6280
Oki M5205 (ADPCM)
Red Book CD audio
  • Mono
  • Stereo
?
NEC Super CD-ROM2 SuperCDROM2.jpg 1991 Oki M5205 (ADPCM)
Red Book CD audio
  • Mono
  • Stereo
?
NEC PC Engine LT PC Engine LT.jpg 1991 Hudson HuC6280
  • Mono
  • Stereo
The system only has a single speaker but stereo out is available from the headphone jack
NEC PC Engine Duo-R/Duo-RX DuoR.png 1993 Hudson HuC6280
Oki M5205 (ADPCM)
Red Book CD audio
  • Mono
  • Stereo
?
Sega Mega Drive (model 1) JP Mega Drive Model 1.png 1988 (JP)

1990 (PAL)

Yamaha YM2612 (FM + PCM)
Sega VDP (PSG)
  • Mono
  • Stereo
The AV connector only has mono out, but stereo out is available from the headphone jack. Rear stereo out can also be modded into these consoles.
Sega-Mega-Drive-EU-Mk1-wController-FL.png
Sega Genesis (model 1) Genesis Model 1.png 1989
  • Mono
  • Stereo
Sega Genesis (model 2) Genesis Model 2.png 1993
  • Mono
  • Stereo
?
Sega Genesis 3 Genesis Model 3.png 1998
  • Mono
  • Stereo (with mod)
Can be modified for stereo sound
Sega Mega Jet Sega mega jet.jpg 1994
  • Mono
  • Stereo
?
Sega Nomad Sega Nomad.png 1995
  • Mono
  • Stereo
The system only has a single speaker but stereo out is available from the headphone jack and AV out
Sega CD Sega CD Model 1.png 1991 Ricoh RF5C164
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Roland Sound Space (RSS)
'Snatcher' and 'Shadow of the Beast 2' confirmed to support RSS. (Link)
Sega/Victor Wondermega RG-M1 VictorWondermega.jpg 1992 Yamaha YM3438 core (FM + PCM)
Sega VDP (PSG)
Ricoh RF5C164
  • Mono
  • Stereo
?
JVC X'Eye/Victor Wondermega RG-M2 Wondermega M2.png 1993
  • Mono
  • Stereo
?
Sega CDX Sega CDX.png 1994
  • Mono
  • Stereo
?
Sega 32X Sega 32X.png 1994 Sega 315-5818
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • QSound
?
Sega Game Gear * Game Gear.png 1990 Texas Instruments SN76489A core (PSG)
  • Mono
  • Stereo
This system only has a single speaker, but stereo out is available from the headphone jack
Nintendo Game Boy (DMG) Game Boy.png 1989 Sharp LR35902
  • Mono
  • Stereo
This system only has a single speaker, but stereo out is available from the headphone jack
Nintendo Game Boy Pocket Game Boy Pocket.png 1996
Nintendo Game Boy Light Game Boy Light.png 1998
Nintendo Game Boy Color Game Boy Color.png
Super Nintendo (US) SNES.png 1991 Sony SPC700
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Dolby Surround
?
Super Famicom * Super Famicom.png 1990 ?
Super Nintendo (PAL) * SNES Jr Europe.png 1992 ?
SNK Neo Geo AES * Neo-Geo-AES-Console-Set.png 1990 Yamaha YM2610
  • Mono
  • Stereo
The AV connector only has mono output, but stereo out is available from the headphone jack.
SNK Neo Geo CD Neo-Geo-CD-TopLoader-wController-FL.png 1994 Yamaha YM2610 + Red Book CD audio
  • Mono
  • Stereo
?
Pioneer LaserActive LaserActive.png 1993 ?
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Roland Sound Space (RSS)
?

Fifth generation of consoles

Console Pictures Year of Release Audio Hardware Supported Audio Formats Supported Speaker Layouts Notes
Commodore Amiga CD32 CD32.png 1993 Commodore Paula
Red Book CD audio
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Roland Surround Space (RSS)
  • 4 × 8-bit PCM channels
  • Stereo audio (RCA)
  • 3.5mm headphone jack
  • RSS was used on Xenon 2 for the Amiga CDTV and CD32 (Link)
Panasonic 3DO Panasonic 3DO FZ-1.png 1993 Custom
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Dolby Surround
  • 16-bit stereo sound
  • Stereo CDDA playback.
  • 44.1 kHz sound sampling rate
  • Supports 4-Channel Dolby Surround sound
  • Custom 20-bit digital signal processor (DSP) – 20-bit accumulator with 16-bit parameter registers for extended precision, embedded in the CLIO chip.
  • 13 DMA channels of digital input, to be sampled, and distorted by the DSP.
Atari Jaguar * Atari-Jaguar.png 1993 Motorola SC414201FT/Atari Jerry
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • CD-quality sound (16-bit stereo)
  • Number of sound channels limited by software
  • Two DACs (stereo) convert digital data to analog sound signals
  • Full stereo capabilities
Atari Jaguar CD * Atari-Jaguar-CD-wPro-Controller.jpg 1995 Red Book CD audio ? ? ?
Bandai Playdia * Bandai-Playdia-Set-R.jpg 1994 Asahi Kasei AK8000
Red Book CD audio
  • Mono
  • Stereo
The console has a standard red/white right/left audio output socket and yellow composite video output (Source: Adam Koralik - Bandai Playdia - Fifth VideoGame Generation Recap)
Sega Saturn Saturn Model 1.png 1994 Yamaha YMF292/Sega 315-5687
Red Book CD audio
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • QSound
  • Dolby Surround
?
Sony PlayStation PS1.png 1994 Sony SPU
Red Book CD audio
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Dolby Surround
Early models (SCPH-100x) come with standard RCA outputs. Late production versions of this model also featured higher quality DACs. It and all other models also include Sony's AV multi out connector.
Sony PSone PSOne.png 2000 ?
NEC PC-FX PC-FX-Console-Set.jpg 1994 Hudson HuC6230
Red Book CD audio
  • Mono
  • Stereo
16-Bit Stereo with 2 ADPCM channels and 6 sample channels at 44.1kHz.
Casio Loopy Loopy.png 1995 ?
  • Mono
  • Stereo
The console has a standard red/white right/left audio output socket and yellow composite video output (Source: Adam Koralik - Casio Loopy - Fifth VideoGame Generation Recap) Mono accessed via Left/white output.
Nintendo Virtual Boy[22] Virtual Boy.png 1995 Nintendo Virtual Sound Unit
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • 10-Bit stereo sound
  • 41.7 kHz sampling rate
Nintendo 64[23] N64.png 1996 Nintendo RCP-NUS
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Dolby Surround
TBC - Dolby surround confirmed with Ocarina of Time and unreleased Dinosaur Planet http://archive.thegia.com/n64/dino/dino.html
Apple Pippin Pippin.png 1996 ?
  • Mono
  • Stereo
RCA composite left/right stereo, 16-bit 44 kHz sampled, and headphone output jack

Sixth generation of consoles

Console Pictures Year of Release Audio Hardware Supported Audio Formats Supported Speaker Layouts Notes
Game Boy Advance Game Boy Advance.png 2001 Sharp LR35902
  • Mono (Built-in Speaker)
  • Stereo
The system only has a mono speaker but stereo out is available from the headphone jack. The SP has no built-in port, thus requires a charging port to headphone jack adapter in order to use headphones.
Game Boy Advance SP Game Boy Advance SP.png 2003
Game Boy Micro Game Boy Micro.png 2005
Sega Dreamcast Dreamcast.png 1998 Yamaha AICA
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • QSound
  • Dolby Surround
?
Sony PlayStation 2 PS2 Fat.png 2000 Sony SPU2
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Dolby Pro Logic II
  • DTS Interactive
The PlayStation 2 was the first game console to output digital audio, in this case via an optical connector.

Four-channel DTS Interactive was the only discrete format (beyond Stereo) that the PS2 could process in real time and this was used by nearly a dozen games, including Grand Theft Auto: Vice City and Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines. The PS2 could also send a 5.1 Dolby Digital stream, but only during cut scenes where the audio didn't have to be dynamically generated on the spot.

Sony PlayStation 2 (SCPH-7xxxx) PS2 Slim.png 2004
Sony PlayStation 2 (SCPH-900xx) PS2 Slim 2.png 2007
VM Labs Nuon Samsung Nuon N2000.png 2000 ?
  • Mono
  • Stereo
32-megabyte 8-bit Fast Page DRAM at 33 MHz, 512-kilobytes sound RAM and 24-kilobytes programmable ROM
Microsoft Xbox Xbox.png 2001 NVIDIA Soundstorm (DSP/APU)

Wolfson WM9709 (DAC)

  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Dolby Pro Logic II
  • Dolby Digital / AC3
Digital output only officially available with certain cables.

Audio processor was integrated in the NVIDIA MCPX south bridge.

Nintendo GameCube GameCube.png Panasonic Q.png 2001 Macronix 16-bit DSP
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Dolby Pro Logic II
Panasonic Q version of the Gamecube may have been the first console in history to support the native use of subwoofers, mainly for DVD playback as opposed to in-game use. Digital audio available from digital output (but not officially used).

Audio processor was integrated into the "Flipper" GPU.

Seventh generation of consoles

Console Pictures Year of Release Audio Hardware Supported Audio Formats Supported Speaker Layouts Notes
Nintendo DS series incl. DSi DS.png 2004 Mitsumi MM3205B
  • Stereo
  • Pseudo-Surround
Most titles with sound options have said choices for simulated surround. A few others have a forced mono option instead.

The DSi and DSi XL have an option to force mono audio in the system settings.

Sony PSP (Non-Street/Go Series) PSP-1000.png 2004 Wolfson Microelectronics WM8973G (DAC)

Custom sound processor

  • Stereo
  • Binaural
Most PSP software only offers plain stereo (except for the XMB's media player, which offers EQ presets available by short pressing the "sound" key only with external phones/speakers). PS1 software keeps original sound capabilities.
Sony PSP-N1000 series (Go) PSP-Go.png 2009 First console to support Bluetooth for general purpose audio output.
Sony PSP-E1000 series (Street) PSP Street.svg 2011
  • Mono (Built-In Speaker)
  • Stereo
  • Binaural
This system only has a single speaker, but stereo out is available from the headphone jack
Nintendo Wii Wii.png 2006 Macronix 16-bit DSP
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Dolby Pro Logic 2
The audio hardware on the Wii was shared with the GameCube, as the GPU is also similar.
Microsoft Xbox 360 Xbox 360 Vertical.png 2005 Software-based audio processing by the CPU; no DSP is used.[24]

Additional custom audio decoder for the proprietary XMA codec built into the south bridge.

  • Analog stereo
  • Stereo LPCM (TOSLINK and HDMI)
  • Dolby Digital 5.1 (TOSLINK and HDMI)
  • Dolby Digital with WMA pro (TOSLINK and HDMI)
Original models require a suitable video cable or adapter for optical audio. Consoles with a Xenon, Elpis, or Opus motherboard have no HDMI port.

The video encoder chip was called ANA on launch consoles with Xenon motherboards, and upgraded to the HANA on Zephyr and newer motherboards.

Microsoft Xbox 360 S Xbox 360 S.png 2010 TOSLINK port is built into Xbox 360 S motherboards, thus not requiring a video cable or adapter.

The launch models of the 360 S featured a Trinity motherboard, which still had the HANA encoder chip like the HDMI-equipped original models. The later Corona & Waitsburg motherboards integrated the HANA into the south bridge (now named KSB).

Microsoft Xbox 360 E Xbox 360 E.png 2013 No built-in TOSLINK; digital audio can only be outputted through HDMI.

All motherboards on this model have a KSB south bridge.

Sony PlayStation 3 PS3-Fat.png 2006 Software based audio processing by the CPU; no DSP is used.

The GPU (NVIDIA & Sony RSX) handles the audio output.

  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • LPCM
  • AAC
  • Dolby Digital 5.1
  • Dolby Digital Plus (HDMI)
  • Dolby TrueHD* (HDMI)
  • DTS 5.1 (HDMI)
  • DTS-HD* (HDMI)
  • 5.1
  • 7.1
Audio output formats
  • A/V-Multi
    • Analog stereo
  • TOSLINK
    • LPCM 2ch 44.1 kHz, 48 kHz, 88 kHz, 176.4 kHz
    • Dolby Digital 5.1
    • DTS 5.1
    • AAC
  • HDMI
    • LPCM 2ch, 5.1ch, 7.1ch 44.1 kHz, 48 kHz, 88 kHz, 96 kHz, 176.4 kHz, 192 kHz
    • Dolby Digital 5.1
    • DTS 5.1
    • AAC
    • DTS-HD Master Audio Bitstream*
    • Dolby TrueHD Bitstream*

All models can decode Dolby TrueHD and (as of firmware 2.30 and later) DTS-HD Master Audio, to be output as LPCM. Output of the raw undecoded stream is limited to Slim and Super Slim models.[6]

Sony PlayStation 3 (CECH-2xxx/30xx) PS3-Slim.png 2009
Sony PlayStation 3 (CECH-4xxx) PS3-Super-Slim.png 2012

Eighth generation of consoles

Console Pictures Year of Release Audio Hardware Supported Audio Formats Supported Speaker Layouts Notes
Nintendo 3DS/2DS Series incl. New[25] 3DS.png 2011 CEVA TeakLite II (3DS mode)

"CSND" audio block (DS[i]/GBA backward compatibility)

  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Pseudo-Surround
  • Binaural
"Surround" is simulated 3D sound. O2DS has mono speaker.
Sony PS Vita (PCH-1xxx) Vita.png 2011 Wolfson Microelectronics WM1803
  • Stereo
?
Sony PS Vita TV & Sony PlayStation TV PSTV.png 2013 ?
Sony PS Vita (PCH-20xx) Vita 2000.png Wolfson Microelectronics WM1803 (Early models)

Conexant CX20902 (Late models)

?
Nintendo Wii U Wii U.png 2012 Custom DSP inside the ATI Latte GPU[26]
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • 5.1 linear PCM
  • Analog stereo
DSP is integrated into the GPU, similarly to the Wii and Gamecube.
Sony PlayStation 4 (CUH-1xxx) PS4.png 2013 Custom AMD TrueAudio
  • Mono
  • Stereo
?
Sony PlayStation 4 (CUH-2xxx) PS4 Slim.png 2016 The optical audio port was removed on the PS4 Slim models.
Sony PlayStation 4 Pro PS4 Pro.png 2016
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Dolby Digital
  • DTS
When setting your console up, as you’ll need to change it to set your sound from the standard PCM to bitstreaming Dolby Digital or DTS. The PS4 Pro also only supports Dolby Atmos for compatible Blu-ray movies, it does not support Atmos for games.
Microsoft Xbox One Xbox One.png 2013 SHAPE Audio Processor
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Dolby Atmos
  • DTS:X
?
Microsoft Xbox One S Xbox One S.png 2016 ?
Microsoft Xbox One X Xbox One X.png 2017 ?
Nintendo Switch (all models) Switch.png 2017 Realtek ALC5639
  • Undocked: Linear PCM 2.0 ch stereo speakers (with pseudo-surround)
  • Docked: Linear PCM 5.1 ch
?

Ninth generation of consoles

Console Pictures Year of Release Audio Hardware Supported Audio Formats Supported Speaker Layouts Notes
Sony PlayStation 5 (All models) PS5 Disc Edition.pngPS5.png 2020 Tempest Engine audio chip
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Custom Tempest Engine 3D Audio
  • Dolby Atmos & DTS:X (Blu-ray video & UHD Blu-ray video)
  • 7.1 surround sound
The PS5 does not support Dolby Atmos, instead using Sony's tempest engine, which does not support high channel speakers.
Microsoft Xbox Series S

Xbox Series S.png

2020 CFPU2 processor, MOVAD Opus decoder, & Logan audio engine
  • Mono
  • Stereo
  • Custom Project Acoustics 3D Audio
  • Dolby Atmos
  • DTS:X
  • 7.1 surround sound
The Xbox Series X and Xbox Series S are the first consoles ever to enable gaming in both Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos.
Microsoft Xbox Series X Xbox Series X.png

External links

  1. https://forum.digitpress.com/forum/showthread.php?24851-The-first-home-video-game-system-with-stereo-sound-was
  2. https://forums.atariage.com/topic/199461-atari-2600-stereo-mod/
  3. https://support.xbox.com/en-IE/help/account-profile/accessibility/listen-in-mono#:~:text=On%20an%20Xbox%20console&text=Press%20the%20Xbox%20button%20%EE%8F%A3,and%20then%20select%20Mono%20output.
  4. https://forum.digitpress.com/forum/showthread.php?24851-The-first-home-video-game-system-with-stereo-sound-was
  5. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AcBO3wHwdWE&t=1172s
  6. 6.0 6.1 https://www.quadraphonicquad.com/forums/threads/playing-sacds-with-quad-receivers-buying-sacds.27674/
  7. https://entertainment.time.com/2013/09/16/how-did-dolby-sound-change-the-movies/
  8. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_Hassle
  9. https://www.reddit.com/r/vita/comments/2spzqk/dont_play_corpse_party_in_the_dark_with_headphones/
  10. https://www.loc.gov/preservation/digital/formats/fdd/fdd000011.shtml
  11. https://www.ps3blog.net/about/ps3-specs//
  12. https://thx.fandom.com/wiki/List_of_THX_Certified_Video_Games
  13. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vI9UUjrpNVs&t=388s
  14. https://medium.com/@AndrewElmore/did-you-know-these-retro-game-consoles-are-capable-of-surround-sound-70336b760252
  15. https://segaretro.org/Dolby_Surround#Dreamcast
  16. https://segaretro.org/Roland_Sound_Space
  17. https://www.techradar.com/news/gaming/consoles/gaming-audio-101-everything-you-need-to-know-about-surround-sound-1292323
  18. https://forums.atariage.com/topic/351323-atari-2600-stereo-mod-actually-making-a-significant-difference-to-audio-content-or-not//
  19. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nUkTzqd_bpA
  20. https://medium.com/@Karakuroraka/im-not-sure-how-much-further-you-ve-dived-into-the-subject-but-i-m-aware-of-at-least-two-titles-a54fa45ece50
  21. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nUkTzqd_bpA
  22. https://www.copetti.org/writings/consoles/virtual-boy/#audio
  23. https://www.copetti.org/writings/consoles/nintendo-64/#audio
  24. https://www.copetti.org/writings/consoles/xbox-360/#audio
  25. https://www.copetti.org/writings/consoles/nintendo-3ds/#audio
  26. https://www.copetti.org/writings/consoles/wiiu/#audio