The NEW Build Your Own Arcade Controls
Main => Monitor/Video Forum => Topic started by: radiator on March 20, 2003, 02:15:34 pm
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only a quickie,
just wondered why, on the s-video socket on many (all?) graphics cards, it has 7 pins, but an s-video cable (or socket on a tv) only has 4?
ta
:P
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Look closely, they typically are NOT the same plug.
They have the same circumfrence, but the pin layout and especially the "key" (the piece of plastic used to ensure you have it aligned correctly) is different.
A real "S-Video" port has 4 pins, plus a "tangental" rectangular key whole, plus 3 dimples in the plastic to assist in alignment in mating with 3 matching indents in the metal plug. The wires are two pairs: Ground+Chroma (picture color), Ground+Luminance (picture brightness, or the b+w picture).
Here's a good picture of a s-vid port: (http://www.evga.com/articles/images/52-a.jpg)
Video cards usually use a port similar in size but with more pins to handle additional signals such as Video Composite In, Video S in. The key usually is vertical instead of horizontal, and more pins are placed in different positions. I can't find a picture of one right now to compare with.
Usually these cards will include a breakout "Y" style cable that plugs into that port that fans out into all the different connectors it supports. The small round plug is only used for connection convience and to save space on the card instead of mounting all the individual ports on it that it may not have room for (or cost more with pc board extensions/etc..)
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righty-oh
second question then,
i'm gonna get an OEM radeon 7500, which won't include any cables, so i guess i'll have to track one down.
and thirdly, i'm using a Matrox G400 at the moment, just for testing purposes. it has 2 VGA sockets on it, with a breakout cable that connects to one of them - this cable has compsite and s-video (Y shaped cable), yet the s-video also has 7 pins, and my s-video cable fits perfectly (but, i get no colour, just a black and white image)
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I have a Creative TNT2 card with a tv port like you are describing with all the extra pins. Just as an experiment I plugged in my s-video cable and was shocked to see it work with my tv. I am running this through an adapter box since my TV does not have tv out. I was pleasently surprised. Now to find another tv cheap so I can build a cabinet.