• Universal digital interface accepts YCrCb (CCIR601
or 656) or RGB (15, 16 or 24-bit) video data in both
non-interlaced and interlaced formats
• True Scale
TM
rendering engine supports undescan
operations for various graphics resolutions† ¥
• Enhanced text sharpness and adaptive flicker removal
with up to 5-lines of filtering†
• Enhanced dot crawl control and area reduction
• Fully programmable through I2C port
• Supports NTSC, NTSC-EIA (Japan), and PAL (B, D,
G, H, I, M and N) TV formats
• Provides Composite, S-Video and SCART outputs
• Auto-detection of TV presence
• Supports VBI pass-through
• Programmable power management
• 9-bit video DAC outputs
• Complete Windows and DOS driver software
• Offered in 44-pin PLCC, 44-pin TQFP, or 100-pin
PQFP package options
• 4 Programmable GPIO pins (only with 100-pin PQFP)
†Patent number 5,781,241
¥ Patent number 5,914,753
TM
7.X anti-copy protection
TM
General Description
Chrontel’s CH7004 digital PC to TV encoder is a standalone integrated circuit which provides a PC 99 compliant
solution for TV output. It provides a universal digital input
port to accept a pixel data stream from a compatible VGA
controller (or equivalent) and converts this directly into
NTSC or PAL TV format.
This circuit integrates a digital NTSC/PAL encoder with
9-bit DAC interface, and new adaptive flicker filter, and
high accuracy low-jitter phase locked loop to create
outstanding quality video. Through its TrueScale
scaling and de-flickering engine, the CH7004 supports full
vertical and horizontal underscan capability and operates
in 5 different resolutions including 640x480 and 800x600.
A new universal digital interface along with full
programmability make the CH7004 ideal for system-level
PC solutions. All features are software programmable
through a standard I2C port, to enable a complete PC
solution using a TV as the primary display.
TM
201-0000-024 Rev 2.1, 8/2/991
D[15:0]
PIXEL DATA
RGB-YUV
CONVERTER
DIGITAL
INPUT
INTERFACE
I2C REGISTER & CONTROL
BLOCK
SCSDADDR
LINE
MEMORY
TRUE SCALE
SCALING & DEFLICKERING
ENGINE
SYSTEM CLOCK
PLL
XCLK
YUV-RGB CONVERTER
NTSC/PAL
ENCODER
& FILTERS
TIMING & SYNC GENERATOR
XI XO/FIN
V
H
Figure 1: Functional Block Diagram
CSYNC
P-OUT
TRIPLE
DAC
BCO
Y/R
C/G
CVBS/B
RSET
CHRONTELCH7004C
D[2]
D[3]
D[1]
6
5
7
V
H
XCLK
DVDD
D[0]
4
3
2
1
P-OUT
DGND
BCO
AGND
44
43
42
41
40
XO/FIN
39
D[4]
D[5]
D[6]
DVDD
8
9
10
11
38
37
36
35
XI
AVDD
DVDD
ADDR
CHRONTEL
D[7]DGND
D[8]
D[9]
D[10]
D[11]
12
13
14
15
16
17
34
CH7004
18
19
20
21
22
D[12]
D[13]
D[14]
D[15]
DVDD
24
23
CSYNC
25
26
27
28
Y
C
GND
DGND
CVBS
33
32
31
30
29
SC
SDDGND]
VDD
RSET
GND
Figure 2: 44-Pin PLCC
2201-0000-024 Rev 2.1, 8/2/99
CHRONTELCH7004C
D[2]
D[3]
D[3]
D[4]
D[4]
D[5]
D[5]
D[6]
D[6]
DVDD
DVDD
D[7]
D[7]
D[8]
D[8]
DGND]
DGND]
D[9]
D[9]
D[10]
D[10]
D[11]
D[11]
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
D[1]
44
43
13
13
V
H
XCLK
DVDD
D[0]
42
41
40
39
P-OUT
38
37
CHRONTEL
CH7004
14
15
16
18
17
DGND
BCO
AGND
36
35
34
33
XO/FIN
XO/FIN
32
XI
XI
AVDD
31
AVDD
DVDD
30
DVDD
ADDR
29
ADDR
DGND
28
DGND
SC
27
SC
SD
26
SD
VDD
25
VDD
RSET
24
RSET
GND
23
GND
19
20
21
22
Y
C
D[12]
D[13]
D[14]
D[15]
DVDD
Figure 3: 44-PIN TQFP
CSYNC
GND
DGND
CVBS
201-0000-024 Rev 2.1, 8/2/993
CHRONTELCH7004C
Table 1. Pin Descriptions
44-Pin
PLCC
21-15
13-12,
10-4
4337OutP-OUT
139InXCLK
341In/OutV
240In/OutH
4135OutBCO
3832InXI
3933InXO/FIN
44Pin
TQFP
15,14,
13,12,
11,10,
9,7,6,
4,3,
2,1,
44,43,42
TypeSymbolDescription
InD15-D0
Digital Pixel Inputs
These pins accept digital pixel data streams with either 8, 12, or 16-bit
multiplexed or 16-bit non-multiplexed formats, determined by the input
mode setting (see Registers and Programming section). Inputs D0 - D7
are used when operating in 8-bit multiplexed mode. Inputs D0 - D11 are
used when operating in 12-bit mode. Inputs D0 - D15 are used when
operating in 16-bit mode. The data structure and timing sequence for
each mode is described in the section on Digital Input Port.
Pixel Clock Output
The CH7004, operating in master mode, provides a pixel data clocking
signal to the VGA controller. This pin provides the pixel clock output
signal (adjustable as X, 2X or 3X) to the VGA controller (see the section
on Digital Video Interface and Registers and Programming for more
details). The capacitive loading on this pin should be kept to a
minimum.
Pixel Clock Input
To operate in a pure master mode, the P-OUT signal should be
connected to the XCLK input pin. To operate in a pseudo-master mode,
the P-OUT clock is used as a reference frequency, and a signal locked
to this output (at 1X, 1/2X, or 1/3X the P-OUT frequency) is input to the
XCLK pin. To operate in slave mode, the CH7004 accepts an external
pixel clock input at this pin. The capacitive loading on this pin should be
kept to a minimum.
Vertical Sync Input/Output
This pin accepts the vertical sync signal from the VGA controller, or
outputs a vertical sync to the VGA controller. The capacitive loading on
this pin should kept to a minimum.
Horizontal Sync Input/Output
This pin accepts the horizontal sync from the VGA controller, or outputs
a horizontal sync to the VGA controller. The capacitive loading on this
pin should be kept to a minimum.
Buffered Clock Output
This pin provides a buffered output of the 14.31818 MHz crystal input
frequency for other devices and remains active at all times (including
power-down). The output can also be selected to be other frequencies
(see Registers and Programming).
Crystal Input
A parallel resonance 14.31818 MHz (± 50 ppm) crystal should be
attached between XI and XO/FIN. However, if an external CMOS clock
is attached to XO/FIN, XI should be connected to ground.
Crystal Output or External Fref
A 14.31818 MHz (± 50 ppm) crystal may be attached between XO/FIN
and XI. An external CMOS compatible clock can be connected to
XO/FIN as an alternative.
4201-0000-024 Rev 2.1, 8/2/99
CHRONTELCH7004C
Table 1. Pin Descriptions
44-Pin
PLCC
3024InRSET
2822OutY/R
2721OutC/G
2620OutCVBS/B
2317OutCSYNC
3226In/OutSD
3327InSC
3529In ADDR
40 34PowerAGND
3731PowerAVDD
N/AN/AIn/outGPI 0
44Pin
TQFP
TypeSymbolDescription
Reference Resistor
A 360 Ω resistor with short and wide traces should be attached
between RSET and ground. No other connections should be made to
this pin.
Luminance Output
A 75 Ω termination resistor with short traces should be attached
between Y and ground for optimum performance. In normal operating
modes other than SCART, this pin outputs the luma video signal. In
SCART mode, this pin outputs the red signal.
Chrominance Output
A 75 Ω termination resistor with short traces should be attached
between C and ground for optimum performance. In normal operating
modes other than SCART, this pin outputs the chroma video signal. In
SCART mode, this pin outputs the green signal.
Composite Video Output
A 75 Ω termination resistor with short traces should be attached
between CVBS and ground for optimum performance. In normal
operating modes other than SCART, this pin outputs the composite
video signal. In SCART mode, this pin outputs the blue signal.
Composite Sync Output
A 75 Ω termination resistor with short traces should be attached
between CSYNC and ground for optimum performance. In SCART
mode, this pin outputs the composite sync signal.
Serial Data (External pull-up required)
This pin functions as the serial data pin of the I2C interface port (see the
I2C Port Operation section for details).
Serial Clock (Internal pull-up)
This pin functions as the serial clock pin of the I2C interface port (see
the I2C Port Operation section for details).
I2C Address Select (Internal pull-up)
This pin is the I2C Address Select, which corresponds to bits 1 and 0 of
the I2C device address (see the I2C Port Operation section for details),
creating an address selection as follows:
These pins provide the ground reference for the analog section of the
CH7004, and MUST be connected to the system ground, to prevent
latchup. Refer to the Application Information section for information on
proper supply de-coupling.
Analog Supply Voltage
These pins supply the 5V power to the analog section of the CH7004.
General Purpose I/O Pin
[3:0]
201-0000-024 Rev 2.1, 8/2/995
CHRONTELCH7004C
Table 1. Pin Descriptions
44-Pin
PLCC
3125PowerVDD
29, 2519,23PowerGND
44, 36,
22, 11
42, 34,
24, 14
N/AN/AOutR
N/AN/AOutG
N/AN/AOut B
44Pin
TQFP
5,16,
30,38
8,18,
28,36
TypeSymbolDescription
PowerDVDD
PowerDGND
DAC Power Supply
These pins supply the 5V power to CH7004’s internal DAC’s.
DAC Ground
These pins provide the ground reference for CH7004’s internal DACs.
For information on proper supply de-coupling, please refer to the
Application Information section.
Digital Supply Voltage
These pins supply the 3.3V power to the digital section of CH7004.
Digital Ground
These pins provide the ground reference for the digital section of
CH7004, and MUST be connected to the system ground to prevent
latchup.
R (Red) Component Output
This pin provides the analog Red component of the digital RGB input in
the RGB Pass-Through mode.
G (Green) Component Output
This pin provides the analog Green component of the digital RGB input
in the RGB Pass-Through mode.
B (Blue) Component Output
This pin provides the analog Blue component of the digital RGB input in
the RGB Pass-Through mode.
Digital Video Interface
The CH7004 digital video interface provides a flexible digital interface between a computer graphics controller and
the TV encoder IC, forming the ideal quality/cost configuration for performing the TV-output function. This digital
interface consists of up to 16 data signals and 4 control signals, all of which are subject to programmable control
through the CH7004 register set. This interface can be configured as 8, 12 or 16-bit inputs operating in either
multiplexed mode or 16-bit input operation in de-multiplexed mode. It will also accept either YCrCb or RGB (15,
16 or 24-bit) data formats and will accept both non-interlaced and interlaced data formats. A summary of the input
data format modes is as follows:
Table 2. Input Data Formats
Bus
Width
16-bit Non-multiplexedRGB 16-bit5-6-5 each word
15-bitNon-multiplexedRGB 15-bit5-5-5 each word
16-bitNon-multiplexedYCrCb (24-bit)CbY0,CrY1...(CCIR656 style)
8-bit2X-multiplexedRGB 15-bit5-5-5 over two bytes
8-bit2X-multiplexedRGB 16-bit5-6-5 over two bytes
8-bit3X-multiplexedRGB 24-bit8-8-8 over three bytes
8-bit2X-multiplexedYCrCb (24-bit)Cb,Y0,Cr,Y1,(CCIR656 style)
12-bit2X-multiplexedRGB 248-8-8 over two words - ‘C’ version
12-bit2X-multiplexedRGB 248-8-8 over two words - ‘I’ version
16-bit2X-multiplexed RGB 24 (32)8-8,8X over two words
Transfer ModeColor Space and DepthFormat Reference
6201-0000-024 Rev 2.1, 8/2/99
CHRONTELCH7004C
The clock and timing signals used to latch and process the incoming pixel data is dependent upon the clock mode.
The CH7004 can operate in either master (the CH7004 generates a pixel frequency which is either returned as a
phase-aligned pixel clock or used directly to latch data), or slave mode (the graphics chip generates the pixel clock).
The pixel clock frequency will change depending upon the active image size (e.g., 640x480 or 800x600), the desired
output format (NTSC or PAL), and the amount of scaling desired. The pixel clock may be requested to be 1X, 2X,
or 3X the pixel data rate (subject to a 100MHz frequency limitation). In the case of a 1X pixel clock the CH7004
will automatically use both clock edges, if a multiplexed data format is selected.
Sync Signals: Horizontal and vertical sync signals will normally be supplied by the VGA controller, but may be
selected to be generated by the CH7004. In the case of CCIR656 style input (IDF = 1 or 9), embedded sync may also
be used. (In each case, the period of the horizontal sync should be equal to the duration of the pixel clock, times the
first value of the (Total Pixels/Line x Total Lines/Frame) column of the Table17 on page 32 (display Mode
Register OOH description). The leading edge of the horizontal sync is used to determine the start of each line. The
Vertical sync signal must be able to be set to the second value in the: (Total Pixels/Line x Total Lines/Frame)
column of Table17 on page 32).
Master Clock Mode: The CH7004 generates a clock signal (output at the P-OUT pin) which will be used by the
VGA controller as a frequency reference. The VGA controller will then generate a clock signal which will be input
via the XCLK input. This incoming signal will be used to latch (and de-multiplex, if required) incoming data. The
XCLK input clock rate must match the input data rate, and the P-OUT clock can be requested to be 1X, 2X or 3X
the pixel data rate. As an alternative, the P-OUT clock signal can also be used as the input clock signal (connected
directly to the XCLK input) to latch the incoming data. If this mode is used, the incoming data must meet setup and
hold times with respect to the XCLK input (with the only internal adjustment being XCLK polarity).
Slave Clock Mode: The VGA controller will generate a clock which will be input to the XCLK pin (no clock signal
will be output on the P-OUT pin). This signal must match the input data rate, must occur at 1X, 2X or 3X the pixel
data rate, and will be used to latch (and de-multiplex if required) incoming data. Also, the graphics IC transmits
back to the TV encoder the horizontal and vertical timing signals, and pixel data, each of which must meet the
specified setup and hold times with respect to the pixel clock.
Pixel Data: Active pixel data will be expected after a programmable number pixels times the multiplex rate after the
leading edge of Horizontal Sync. In other words, specifying the horizontal back porch value (as a pixel count), plus
horizontal sync width, will determine when the chip will begin to sample pixels.
Non-multiplexed Mode
In the 15/16-bit mode shown in Figure4, the pixel data bus represents a 15/16-bit non-multiplexed data stream,
which contains either RGB or YCrCb formatted data. When operating in RGB mode, each 15/16-bit Pn value will
contain a complete pixel encoded in either 5-6-5 or 5-5-5 format. When operating in YCrCb mode, each 16-bit Pn
word will contain an 8-bit Y (luminance) value on the upper 8 bits, and an 8-bit C (color difference) value on the
lower 8 bits. The color difference will be transmitted at half the data rate of the luminance data, with the sequencebeing set as Cb followed by Cr. The Cb and Cr data will be co-sited with the Y value transmitted with the Cb value,
with the data sequence described in Table3. The first active pixel is SAV pixels after the trailing edge of horizontal
sync, where SAV is a bus-controlled register.
201-0000-024 Rev 2.1, 8/2/997
CHRONTELCH7004C
t
HSW
HSYNC
t
HD
POut/
XCLK
AVRSAV
Pixel
Data
P0aP0bP1aP1bP2aP2b
P0
Figure 4: Non-multiplexed Data Transfers
Table 3. 15/16-bit Non-multiplexed Data Formats
t
t
P
P 1
P1
t
t
PH 1
PH
t
t
SP1
SP
t
t
HP
HP1
P2P3P4
P5
IDF#
Format
Pixel#P0P1P2P3P0P1P2P3
Bus DataD[15]R0[4]R1[4]xxY0[7]Y1[7]Y2[7]Y3[7]
When IDF = 1, (YCrCb 16-bit mode), H and V sync signals can be embedded into the data stream. In this mode, the
embedded sync will be similar to the CCIR656 convention (not identical, since that convention is for 8-bit data
streams), and the first byte of the ‘video timing reference code’ will be assumed to occur when a Cb sample would
occur – if the video stream was continuous. This is delineated in Table4 below.
Table 4. YCrCb Non-multiplexed Mode with Embedded Syncs
IDF#
Format
Pixel#P0P1P2P3P4P5P6P7
Bus DataD[15]0S[7]Y0[7]Y1[7]Y2[7]Y3[7]Y4[7]Y5[7]
In this mode, the S[7-0] byte contains the following data:
S[6]= F = 1 during field 2, 0 during field 1
S[5]=V=1 during field blanking, 0 elsewhere
S[4]=H=1 during EAV (the synchronization reference at the end of active video)
0 during SAV (the synchronization reference at the start of active video)
Bits S[7] and S[3.0] are ignored.
Multiplexed Mode
Each rising edge (or each rising and falling edge) of the XCLK signal will latch data from the graphics chip. The
multiplexed input data formats are shown in Figure5 and 6. The Pixel Data bus represents an 8, 12, or 16-bit
multiplexed data stream, which contains either RGB or YCrCb formatted data. In IDF settings of 2, 4, 5, 7, 8, and 9,
the input data rate is 2X PCLK, and each pair of Pn values (e.g., P0a and P0b) will contain a complete pixel,
encoded as shown in the tables below. When IDF = 6, the input data rate is 3X PCLK, and each triplet of Pn values
(e.g., P0a, P0b and P0c) will contain a complete pixel, encoded as shown in the tables below. When the input is
YCrCb, the color-difference data will be transmitted at half the data rate of the luminance data, with the sequence
being set as Cb, Y, Cr, Y where Cb0,Y0,Cr0 refers to co-sited luminance and color-difference samples — and the
following Y1 byte refers to the next luminance sample, per CCIR656 standards. However, the clock frequency is
dependent upon the current mode, (not 27MHz, as specified in CCIR656).
201-0000-024 Rev 2.1, 8/2/999
CHRONTELCH7004C
Digital Video Interface (continued)
t
HSW
HS
t
t
HD
P2
XCLK
DEC = 0
t
SP2
XCLK
DEC = 1
D[15:0]P0aP0bP1aP1bP2aP2b
Figure 5: Multiplexed Pixel Data Transfer Mode
Table 5.RGB 8-bit Multiplexed Mode
t
PH2
t
HP2
t
t
SP2
HP2
t
t
SP2
HP2
IDF#
Format
7
RGB 5-6-5
8
RGB 5-5-5
Pixel#P0aP0bP1aP1bP0aP0bP1aP1b
Bus DataD[7]G0[2]R0[4]G1[2]R1[4]G0[2]xG1[2]x
When IDF = 9 (YCrCb 8-bit mode), H and V sync signals can be embedded into the data stream. In this mode, the
embedded sync will follow the CCIR656 convention, and the first byte of the “video timing reference code” will be
assumed to occur when a Cb sample would occur if the video stream was continuous. This is delineated in Table9
shown below.
201-0000-024 Rev 2.1, 8/2/9911
CHRONTELCH7004C
Digital Video Interface (continued)
Table 9. YCrCb Multiplexed Mode with Embedded Syncs
IDF#
Format
Pixel#P0aP0bP1aP1bP2aP2bP3aP3b
Bus DataD[7]FF0000S[7]Cb2[7]Y2[7]Cr2[7]Y3[7]
The CH7004 is a TV-output companion chip to graphics controllers providing digital output in either YUV or RGB
format. This solution involves both hardware and software elements which work together to produce an optimum
TV screen image based on the original computer generated pixel data. All essential circuitry for this conversion are
integrated on-chip. On-chip circuitry includes memory, memory control, scaling, PLL, DAC, filters, and
NTSC/PAL encoder. All internal signal processing, including NTSC/PAL encoding, is performed using digital
techniques to ensure that the high-quality video signals are not affected by drift issues associated with analog
components. No additional adjustment is required during manufacturing.
CH7004 is ideal for PC motherboards, web browsers, or VGA add-in boards where a minimum of discrete support
components (passive components, parallel resonance 14.31818 MHz crystal) are required for full operation.
Architectural Overview
The CH7004 is a complete TV output subsystem which uses both hardware and software elements to produce an
image on TV which is virtually identical to the image that would be displayed on a monitor. Simply creating a
compatible TV output from a VGA input involves a relatively straightforward process. This process includes a
standard conversion from RGB to YUV color space, converting from a non-interlaced to an interlaced frame
sequence, and encoding the pixel stream into NTSC or PAL compliant format. However, creating an optimum
computer-generated image on a TV screen involves a highly sophisticated process of scaling, deflickering, and
filtering. This results in a compatible TV output that displays a sharp and subtle image, of the right size, with
minimal artifacts from the conversion process.
As a key part of the overall system solution, the CH7004 software establishes the correct framework for the VGA
input signal to enable this process. Once the display is set to a supported resolution (either 640x480 or 800x600), the
CH7004 software may be invoked to establish the appropriate TV output display. The software then programs the
various timing parameters of the VGA controller to create an output signal that will be compatible with the chosen
resolution, operating mode, and TV format. Adjustments performed in software include pixel clock rates, total
pixels per line, and total lines per frame. By performing these adjustments in software, the CH7004 can render a
superior TV image without the added cost of a full frame buffer memory – normally used to implement features
such as scaling and full synchronization.
The CH7004 hardware accepts digital RGB or YCrCb inputs, which are latched in synchronization with the pixel
clock. These inputs are then color-space converted into YUV in 4-2-2 format and stored in a line buffer memory.
The stored pixels are fed into a block where scan-rate conversion, underscan scaling and 2-line, 3-line, 4-line and 5line vertical flicker filtering are performed. The scan-rate converter transforms the VGA horizontal scan-rate to
either NTSC or PAL scan rates; the vertical flicker filter eliminates flicker at the output while the underscan scaling
reduces the size of the displayed image to fit onto a TV screen. The resulting YUV signals are filtered through
digital filters to minimize aliasing problems. The digital encoder receives the filtered signals and transforms them to
composite and S-Video outputs, which are converted by the three 9-bit DACs into analog outputs.
Color Burst Generation*
The CH7004 allows the sub-carrier frequency to be accurately generated from a 14.31818 MHz crystal oscillator,
leaving the sub-carrier frequency independent of the sampling rate. As a result, the CH7004 may be used with any
VGA chip (with an appropriate digital interface) since the CH7004 sub-carrier frequency can be generated without
being dependent on the precise pixel rates of VGA controllers. This feature is a significant benefit, since even a ±
0.01% sub-carrier frequency variation may be enough to cause some television monitors to lose color lock.
In addition, the CH7004 has the capability to genlock the color burst signal to the VGA horizontal sync frequency,
which enables a fully synchronous system between the graphics controller and the television. When genlocked, the
CH7004 can also stop “dot crawl” motion (for composite mode operation in NTSC modes) to eliminate the
annoyance of moving borders. Both of these features are under programmable control through the register set.
Display Modes
The CH7004 display mode is controlled by three independent factors: input resolution, TV format, and scale factor,
which are programmed via the display mode register. It is designed to accept input resolutions of 640x480,
800x600, 640x400 (including 320x200 scan-doubled output), 720x400, and 512x384. It is designed to support
201-0000-024 Rev 2.1, 8/2/99*Patent number 5,874,84613
CHRONTELCH7004C
Display Modes (continued)
output to either NTSC or PAL television formats. The CH7004 provides interpolated scaling with selectable factors
of 5:4, 1:1, 7:8, 5:6, 3:4 and 7:10 in order to support adjustable overscan or underscan operation when displayed on
a TV. This combination of factors results in a matrix of useful operating modes which are listed in detail in
(1) Note:Percent underscan is a calculated value based on average viewable lines on each TV format, assuming an average TV ovescan
of 10%. (Negative values) indicate modes which are operating in underscan.
For NTSC: 480 active lines - 10% (overscan) = 432 viewable lines (average)
For PAL: 576 active lines - 10% (overscan) = 518 viewable lines (average)
The inclusion of multiple levels of scaling for each resolution have been created to enable optimal use of the
CH7004 for different application needs. In general, underscan (modes where percent overscan is negative provides
an image that is viewable in its entirety on screen; it should be used as the default for most applications (e.g.,
viewing text screens, operating games, running productivity applications and working within Windows).
Overscanning provides an image that extends past the edges of the TV screen, exactly like normal television
programs and movies appear on TV, and is only recommended for viewing movies or video clips coming from the
computer. In addition to the above mode table, the CH7004 also support interlaced input modes, both in CCIR 656
and proprietary formats (see Display Mode Register section.)
Flicker Filter and Text Enhancement
The CH7004 integrates an advanced 2-line, 3-line, 4-line and 5-line (depending on mode) vertical deflickering filter
circuit to help eliminate the flicker associated with interlaced displays. This flicker circuit provides an adaptive filter
algorithm for implementing flicker reduction with selections of high, medium or low flicker content for both luma
and chroma channels (see register descriptions). In addition, a special text enhancement circuit incorporates
14201-0000-024 Rev 2.1, 8/2/99
CHRONTELCH7004C
Display Modes (continued)
proprietory Algorithms for enhancing the readability of text. These modes are fully programmable via I2C under the
flicker filter register.
Internal Voltage Reference
An on-chip bandgap circuit is used in the DAC to generate a reference voltage which, in conjunction with a
reference resistor at pin RSET, and register controlled divider, sets the output ranges of the DACs. The CH7004
bandgap reference voltage is 1.235 volts nominal for NTSC or PAL-M, or 1.317 volts nominal (for PAL or NTSCJ), which is determined by IDF register bit 6 (DACG bit). The recommended value for the reference resistor RSET
is 360 ohms (though this may be adjusted in order to achieve a different output level). The gain setting for DAC
output is 1/48th. Therefore, for each DAC, the current output per LSB step is determined by the following equation:
I
= V(RSET)/RSET reference resistor * 1/GAIN
LSB
For DACG=0, this is: I
For DACG=1, this is: I
Power Management
The CH7004 supports five operating states including Normal [On], Power Down, Full Power Down, S-Video Off,
and Composite Off to provide optimal power consumption for the application involved. Using the programmable
power down modes accessed over the I2C port, the CH7004 may be placed in either Normal state, or any of the four
power managed states, as listed below (see “Power Management Register” under the Register Descriptions section
for programming information). To support power management, a TV sensing function (see “Connection Detect
Register” under the Register Descriptions section) is provided, which identifies whether a TV is connected to either
S-Video or composite. This sensing function can then be used to enter into the appropriate operating state (e.g., if
TV is sensed only on composite, the S-Video Off mode could be set by software).
= 1.235/360 * 1/48 = 71.4 µA (nominal)
LSB
= 1.317/360 * 1/48 = 76.2 µA (nominal)
LSB
Table 12.Power Management
Operating StateFunctional Description
Normal (On):In the normal operating state, all functions and pins are active
Power Down:In the power-down state, most pins and circuitry are disabled.The
S-Video Off:Power is shut off to the unused DACs associated with S-Video
Composite Off:In Composite-off state, power is shut off to the unused DAC
Full Power Down:In this power-down state, all but the I2C circuits are disabled. This
BCO pin will continue to provide either the VCO divided by K3, or
14.318 MHz out, and the P-OUT pin will continue to output a clock
reference.
outputs.
associated with CVBS output.
places the CH7004 in its lowest power consumption mode.
Luminance and Chrominance Filter Options
The CH7004 contains a set of luminance filters to provide a controllable bandwidth output on both CVBS and SVideo outputs. All values are completely programmable via the Video Bandwidth Register. For all graphs shown,
the horizontal axis is frequency in MHz, and the vertical axis is attenuation in dBs. The composite luminance and
chrominance video bandwidth output is shown in Table13.
MacrovisionTM Anti-copy Protection
The CH7004 implements the Macrovision 7.X anti-copy protection process. This process changes the encoded
output of the NTSC/PAL signals to inhibit recording on VCR devices while not affecting viewing on a TV. The
parameters that control this process are fully programmable and can be described by Chrontel only after a suitable
Non-Disclosure Agreement has been executed between MacrovisionTM, Inc. and the customer.
201-0000-024 Rev 2.1, 8/2/9915
CHRONTELCH7004C
VBI Pass-Through Support
The CH7004 provides the ability to pass-through data with minimal filtering, on vertical blanking lines 10-21 for
Intercast or close captioned applications (see register descriptions).
Table 13. Video Bandwidth
ModeChrominance Luminance Bandwidth with Sin(X) /X (MHz)