LT6205/LT6206/LT6207
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APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
black intensity, thereby causing scan retrace activity to be
invisible on a CRT. The black level of the waveform is at
(or set up very slightly above) the upper limit of the sync
information. Waveform content above the black level is
intensity information, with peak brightness represented
at the maximum signal level. In the case of composite
video, the modulated color subcarrier is superimposed on
the waveform, but the dynamics remain inside the 1VP-P
limit (a notable exception is the chroma ramp used for
differential-gain and differential-phase measurements,
which can reach 1.15VP-P).
DC-Coupled Video Amplier Considerations
Typically video ampliers drive cables that are series
terminated (back-terminated) at the source and load-ter-
minated at the destination with resistances equal to the
cable characteristic impedance, Z0 (usually 75Ω). This
conguration forms a 2:1 resistor divider in the cabling
that must be accounted for in the driver amplier by
delivering 2VP-P output into an effective 2 Z0 load (e.g.,
150Ω). Driving the cable can require more than 13mA
while the output is approaching the saturation limits of the
amplier output. The absolute minimum supply is: VMIN =
2 + VOH +VOL. For example, the LT6206 dual operating on
3.3V as shown on the front page of this data sheet, with
exceptionally low VOH ≤ 0.5V and VOL ≤ 0.35V, provides a
design margin of 0.45V. The design margin must be large
enough to include supply variations and DC bias accuracy
for the DC-coupled video input.
Handling AC-Coupled Video Signals
AC-coupled video inputs are intrinsically more difcult to
handle than those with DC-coupling because the average
signal voltage of the video waveform is effected by the
picture content, meaning that the black level at the amplier
wanders with scene brightness. The wander is measured
as 0.56V for a 1VP-P NTSC waveform changing from black
eld to white eld and vice-versa, so an additional 1.12V
allowance must be made in the amplier supply (assum-
ing gain of 2, so VMIN = 3.12 + VOH +VOL). For example,
an LT6205 operating on 5V has a conservative design
margin of 1.03V. The amplier output (for gain of 2) must
swing +1.47V to –1.65V around the DC-operating point,
so the biasing circuitry needs to be designed accordingly
for optimal delity.
Clamped AC-Input Cable Driver
A popular method of further minimizing supply require-
ments with AC-coupling is to employ a simple clamping
scheme, as shown in Figure 2. In this circuit, the LT6205
operates from 3.3V by having the sync tips control the
charge on the coupling capacitor C1, thereby reducing
the black level input wander to ≈ 0.07V. The only minor
drawback to this circuit is the slight sync tip compression
(≈ 0.025V at input) due to the diode conduction current,
though the picture content remains full delity. This circuit
has nearly the design margin of its DC-coupled counter-
part, at 0.31V (for this circuit, VMIN = 2.14 + VOH +VOL).
The clamp diode anode bias is selected to set the sync tip
output voltage at or slightly above VOL.
YPbPr to RGB Component Video Converter
The back page application uses the LT6207 quad to imple-
ment a minimum amplier count topology to transcode
consumer component video into RGB. In this circuit, signals
only pass through one active stage from any input to any
output, with passive additions being performed by the
cable back-termination resistors. The compromise in using
passive output addition is that the amplier outputs must
be twice as large as that of a conventional cable driver. The
Y-channel section also has the demanding requirement that
it single-handedly drives all three outputs to full brightness
during times of white content, so a helper current source
is used to assure unclipped video when operating from
±5V supplies. This circuit maps sync-on-Y to sync on all
the RGB channels, and for best results should have input
black levels at 0V nominal to prevent clipping.