Component video
Component video is a video signal that has been split into two or more component channels. In popular use, it refers to a type of component analog video information that is transmitted or stored as three separate signals. Component video can be contrasted with composite video in which all the video information is combined into a single line level signal that is used in analog television. Like composite, component-video cables do not carry audio and are often paired with audio cables.
When used without any other qualifications the term component video usually refers to analog YPbPr| component video with sync on luma.
Analog component video
Reproducing a video signal on a display device is a straightforward process complicated by the multitude of signal sources. DVD, VHS, computers and video game consoles all store, process and transmit video signals using different methods, and often each will provide more than one signal option. One way of maintaining signal clarity is by separating the components of a video signal so that they do not interfere with each other. A signal separated in this way is called "component video". S-Video, RGB and YPbPr| signals comprise two or more separate signals, and thus are all component-video signals. For most consumer-level video applications, the common three-cable system using BNC or RCA connectors analog component video was used. Typical resolutions are 480i and 576i. For personal computer displays the 15 pin DIN connector provided screen resolutions including 640×480, 800×600, 1024×768, 1152×864, 1280×1024 and much larger.RGB analog component video
The various RGB analog component video standards use no compression and impose no real limit on color depth or resolution, but require large bandwidth to carry the signal and contain a lot of redundant data since each channel typically includes much of the same black-and-white image. At one time computers offered this signal via a VGA port. Many televisions, especially in Europe, utilize RGB via the SCART connector. All arcade video games, other than early vector and black-and-white games, use RGB monitors.In addition to the red, green and blue color signals, RGB requires two additional signals to synchronize the video display. Several methods are used:
- composite sync, where the horizontal and vertical signals are mixed together on a separate wire
- separate sync, where the horizontal and vertical are each on their own wire
- sync on green, where a composite sync signal is overlaid on the wire used to transport the green signal.
- sync on red or sync on blue, where a composite sync signal is overlaid on either the red or blue wire
- sync on composite, where the signal normally used for composite video is used alongside the RGB signal only for the purposes of sync.
- sync on luma, where the Y signal from S-Video is used alongside the RGB signal only for the purposes of sync.
Separate sync is most common with VGA, used worldwide for analog computer monitors. This is sometimes known as RGBHV, as the horizontal and vertical synchronization pulses are sent in separate channels. This mode requires five conductors. If separate cables are used, the sync lines are usually yellow and white, yellow and black, or gray and black.
Sync on Green is less common, and while some VGA monitors support it, most do not. Sony is a big proponent of SoG, and most of their monitors use it. Like devices that use composite video or S-video, SoG devices require additional circuitry to remove the sync signal from the green line. A monitor that is not equipped to handle SoG will display an image with an extreme green tint, if any image at all, when given a SoG input.
Sync on red and sync on blue are even rarer than sync on green, and are typically used only in certain specialized equipment.
Sync on composite, not to be confused with composite sync, is commonly used on devices that output both composite video and RGB over SCART. The RGB signal is used for color information, while the composite video signal is only used to extract the sync information. This is generally an inferior sync method, as this often causes checkerboards to appear on an image, but the image quality is still much sharper than standalone composite video.
Sync on luma is much similar to sync on composite, but uses the Y signal from S-Video instead of a composite video signal. This is sometimes used on SCART, since both composite video and S-Video luma ride along the same pins. This generally does not suffer from the same checkerboard issue as sync on composite, and is generally acceptable on devices that do not feature composite sync, such as the Sony PlayStation and some modded Nintendo 64 models.
Luma-based analog component video
Further types of component analog video signals do not use separate red, green and blue components but rather a colorless component, termed luma, which provides brightness information. This combines with one or more color-carrying components, termed chroma, that give only color information. Both the S-Video component video output and the YPbPr| component video output seen on DVD players are examples of this method.Converting video into luma and chroma allows for chroma subsampling, a method used by JPEG and MPEG compression schemes to reduce the storage requirements for images and video.
Many consumer TVs, DVD players, monitors, video projectors and other video devices at one time used output or input.
When used for connecting a video source to a video display where both support 4:3 and 16:9 display formats, the PAL television standard provides for signaling pulses that will automatically switch the display from one format to the other.
Connectors used
- D-Terminal: Used mostly on Japanese electronics.
- Three BNC or RCA connectors : Typically colored green, blue and red.
- SCART used in Europe.
- Video In Video Out : 9-pin Mini-DIN-connectors called "TV Out" in computer video cards, which usually include an adaptor for component RCA, composite RCA and 4-pin S-Video-Mini-DIN.
Digital component video: DVI and HDMI
RGB component video has largely been replaced by modern digital formats, such as DisplayPort or Digital Visual Interface digital connections, while home theater systems increasingly favor High-Definition Multimedia Interface, which support higher resolutions, higher dynamic range, and can be made to support digital rights management. The demise of analog is largely due to screens moving to large flat digital panels as well as the desire for having a single cable for both audio and video, but also due to a slight loss of clarity when converting from a digital media source to analog and back again for a flat digital display, particularly when used at higher resolutions where analog signals are highly susceptible to noise.
International standards
Examples of international component video standards are:- RS-170 RGB
- RS-343 RGB
- STANAG 3350 Analogue Video Standard
- CEA-770.3 High Definition TV Analog Component Video Interface Consumer Electronics Association
''Component'' versus ''composite''
Since component video does not undergo the encoding process, the color quality is noticeably better than composite video.
Component video connectors are not unique in that the same connectors are used for several different standards; hence, making a component video connection often does not lead to a satisfactory video signal being transferred. Many DVD players and TVs may need to be set to indicate the type of input/output being used, and if set incorrectly the image may not be properly displayed. Progressive scan, for example, is often not enabled by default, even when component video output is selected.