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TYPICAL CONFIGURATION and VIDEO TERMINOLOGY
+
330 F
m
0.1 F
m
3Vto5V
330 F
m
330 F
m
5
8
7
6
VS+
GND
CH.2IN
CH.3IN
CH.1IN
CH.3OUT
CH.2OUT
CH.1OUT
DAC/
Encoder
1
2
3
4
Y’
P’R
75 W
3.3V
75 W
HDTV
720p/1080i
Y’P’ P’
G’B’R’
VGA
SVGA
XGA
B
R
THS7316
P’B
P’
Out
R
Y’ Out
75 W
P’
Out
B
75 W
22 F
m
SLOS521A – MARCH 2007 – REVISED JANUARY 2008
These diodes provide moderate protection to input overdrive voltages above and below the supplies as well. The
protection diodes can typically support 30-mA of continuous current when overdriven.
A typical application circuit using the THS7316 as a video buffer is shown in
Figure 27. It shows a DAC (or
encoder such as the THS8200) driving the three input channels of the THS7316. Although these channels show
HDTV Y'P'BP'R (sometimes labeled Y'C'BC'R) signals of a 720p or 1080i system, they can also be G'B'R' (R'G'B')
signals or other variations.
Note that the Y' term is used for the luma channels throughout this document rather than the more common
luminance (Y) term. The reason is to account for the definition of luminance as stipulated by the CIE –
International Commission on Illumination. Video departs from true luminance since a nonlinear term, gamma, is
added to the true RGB signals to form R'G'B' signals. These R'G'B' signals are then used to mathematically
create luma (Y'). Thus luminance (Y) is not maintained providing a difference in terminology.
This rationale is also used for the chroma (C') term. Chroma is derived from the non-linear R'G'B' terms and thus
it is nonlinear. Chrominance (C) is derived from linear RGB giving the difference between chroma (C') and
chrominance (C). The color difference signals (P'B / P'R / U' / V') are also referenced this way to denote the
nonlinear (gamma corrected) signals.
R'G'B' (commonly mislabeled RGB) is also called G’B’R’ (again commonly mislabeled as GBR) in professional
video systems. The SMPTE component standard stipulates that the luma information is placed on the first
channel, the blue color difference is placed on the second channel, and the red color difference signal is placed
on the third channel. This is consistent with the Y'P'BP'R nomenclature. Because the luma channel (Y') carries the
sync information and the green channel (G') also carries the sync information, it makes logical sense that G' be
placed first in the system. Since the blue color difference channel (P'B) is next and the red color difference
channel (P'R) is last, then it also makes logical sense to place the B' signal on the second channel and the R'
signal on the third channel, respectively . Thus hardware compatibility is better achieved when using G'B'R'
rather than R'G'B'. Note that for many G'B'R' systems sync is embedded on all three channels, but may not
always be the case in all systems.
Figure 27. Typical HDTV Y'/P'B/P'R Inputs From DC-Coupled Encoder/DAC
With AC-Coupled Line Driving
12
Copyright 2007–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated