Intro to Video Signals: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{| class="wikitable"|- ! Video Standard ! Image ! Description ! Explanation |- | Radio Frequency (RF) | placeholder | A screw-terminal connector, usually seen on pre-80's TVs...")
 
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| RGB is the best quality video you can get on a typical CRT, as it requires no transcoding or changing of the color space, since it is the same format that the electron gun uses to make the image displayed. RGB has many different standards for connectors that will be explained in the next table.
| RGB is the best quality video you can get on a typical CRT, as it requires no transcoding or changing of the color space, since it is the same format that the electron gun uses to make the image displayed. RGB has many different standards for connectors that will be explained in the next table.
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! Description
! Description
|-
|-
| RF
| Coax F-Connector
| placeholder
| placeholder
| Screw terminal connector.
| Usually used for RF. Also sometimes in the form of a brown or orange RCA jack similar to composite.
|-  
|-  
| Composite video
| RCA
| placeholder
| placeholder
| These connectors are known as RCA jacks, as that was the first company to make them.
| Most commonly used for composite but can sometimes be used for S-Video (labelled Y and C) or RF (if orange, black, or brown). Also used for component video (YPbPr or RGB).
|-
| S-Video over Mini-DIN
| placeholder
| These connectors can be very fragile, so make sure not to bend the pins.
|-  
|-  
| Component video
| BNC
| placeholder
| placeholder
| These use the same connectors as Composite video, but are not the same video format!
| Generally found on professional displays and are used as a more secure RCA jack. Also often carry RGB signals.
|-
|-
| SCART
| SCART
| placeholder
| placeholder
| Carries Composite, S-Video, and RGB signals, along with audio. Very common in Europe.
| Can carry Composite, S-Video, and RGB signals, along with audio. Very common in Europe.
|-
| JP-21
| placeholder
| Identical in appearance to SCART but the pinout is different. Generally only found in Japan or Asia. Not compatible with SCART.
|-
|-
| VGA
| VGA
| placeholder
| placeholder
| VGA is an RGBHV standard, usually used in computers.
| VGA is an RGBHV standard that uses a 15-pin D-Sub connector, usually used on computers, PC monitors, and presentation TVs.
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Revision as of 03:00, 21 April 2022

Video Standard Image Description Explanation
Radio Frequency (RF) placeholder A screw-terminal connector, usually seen on pre-80's TVs and consoles. Carries both audio and video, but is very low quality. Audio is only mono, and there is a lot of color banding and mixing.
Composite Video placeholder Also called RCA, for the first company to make them, these typically come in sets of 2 or 3 Composite video is very common, and comes on almost every consumer TV made after 1990. Much higher quality than RF.
S-Video placeholder Also called Y/C. Usually uncommon in consoles until the mid-90s. This standard achieves better quality, because the signal is separated into y (luma, or black and white data) and C (chroma, or color data)
YPbPr placeholder Commonly known as component video. YPbPr splits video out to 3 different connectors, making it better quality than S-Video. These are Y (luma, same as S-Video, and Sync), Pb (the difference between Luma and blue), and Pr (the difference between Luma and red.) Green is unneeded, as it can be found using the information.
RGB placeholder Uses different types of sync such as HV or Composite (not to be confused with composite sync!) RGB is the best quality video you can get on a typical CRT, as it requires no transcoding or changing of the color space, since it is the same format that the electron gun uses to make the image displayed. RGB has many different standards for connectors that will be explained in the next table.


Video Connector Image Description
Coax F-Connector placeholder Usually used for RF. Also sometimes in the form of a brown or orange RCA jack similar to composite.
RCA placeholder Most commonly used for composite but can sometimes be used for S-Video (labelled Y and C) or RF (if orange, black, or brown). Also used for component video (YPbPr or RGB).
BNC placeholder Generally found on professional displays and are used as a more secure RCA jack. Also often carry RGB signals.
SCART placeholder Can carry Composite, S-Video, and RGB signals, along with audio. Very common in Europe.
JP-21 placeholder Identical in appearance to SCART but the pinout is different. Generally only found in Japan or Asia. Not compatible with SCART.
VGA placeholder VGA is an RGBHV standard that uses a 15-pin D-Sub connector, usually used on computers, PC monitors, and presentation TVs.