Video – Sony DVP S9000ES User Manual

Page 11

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11

DVD Technical Notes

Video

Many of the video equalizer adjustments exist to tailor perform-

ance for individual DVDs. That’s why the DVP-S9000ES can

store your favorite settings for instant recall. Custom Memory

lets you store five standard settings for different movie studios,

different DVD genres or different types of display. Playback

Memory stores your fine-tuned adjustments for up to 300 discs.

Each time you insert one of the 300 discs, the player will

automatically recall your specific hand-tailored adjustments.

The master clock resides in the Audio section. But instead of

passively receiving the external clock signal, the video circuit

regenerates its own 27 MHz reference clock with its own quartz

crystal. This reference is distributed to every digital video

circuit. So timing errors and their consequent distortions are

kept to a bare minimum. Images achieve maximum stability and

minimum jitter.

One natural consequence of supplying both progressive and

interlaced video outputs is the need to provide both progressive

and interlaced video D/A converters. DVP-S9000ES is equipped

with both video D/A coverters, one for interlace output and the

other for progressive output. The DVP-S9000ES progressive

D/A converter was developed in cooperation with Analog

Devices Corp., the same company that built the 32-bit SHARC

processor in Sony’s TA-E9000ES A/V digital preamplifier.

This is a Large Scale Integrated circuit (LSI) of remarkable

processing power. Sony’s previous designs converted the DVD’s

8-bit video samples with 10 bits of precision. This current LSI

raises the standard of performance with 12-bit conversion for the

luminance (Y) signal and 11-bit conversion for each of the color

difference signals (C

B

and C

R

). Higher word lengths enable four

times the fine gradations in the luminance channel, and twice as

many gradations in each of the color channels. So you get a

more accurate rendition of colors and gray scale from the deepest

black to the brightest highlights.

In addition, the converter employs video oversampling similar to

the oversampling near universal in audio CD players. To capture

13.5 MHz signals, the luminance channel uses a 27 MHz

sampling frequency. The D/A conversion uses 2x oversampling

system to bring this to 54 MHz. In a similar process, each

chrominance channel gets 4x oversampling. The C

B

and C

R

sampling frequency of 13.5 MHz is quadrupled to 54 MHz. As

in CD players, this method makes quantization noise easier to

filter out, with more linear amplitude frequency response within

the passband and superb suppression of noise outside the

passband. As incorporated in the Analog Devices Super Sub

Alias Filter

TM

design, this

achieves better

signal-to-noise

ratio and superb

frequency

response, taking

DVD 4:2:2 D/A

converters into the

realm of 8:8:8

performance.

Separate video filters for progressive and interlaced outputs help

achieve wide bandwidth, high resolution and minimum out-of-

band noise.

The interlaced output must pass 6.75 MHz, while the progressive

output must achieve twice that frequency — 13.5 MHz. Since

bandwidth equates to resolution, the DVP-S9000ES is equipped

with high-speed video buffer amplifiers that are more than equal

to the task. These circuits can pass 325 MHz without loss. As

such, the buffer amps are prepared to drive capacitive cable runs,

while minimizing such distortions.

In typical audio and video design, an output capacitor prevents

the accidental passing of DC offset voltage from one component

to the next. However, the mere presence of the output capacitor

can affect the audio frequency response and literally tinge the

television picture with unwanted shading. And these effects are

beyond the adjustment of your television’s video adjustments.

Sony’s answer is a rigorous design that controls DC offset

voltages from the start. You get reliable operation without

performance-robbing output capacitors.

Video Clock and Video Data TBC

Fig.12: A dedicated 27 MHz quartz crystal oscillator regenerates a

super-clean video-only reference clock.

54 MHz Video D/A Converter

Fig. 13: The Super Sub Sampling Alias Filter (top) controls

the noise of alias signals (bumps on bottom).

Optimized Video Filters

High-Speed Video Buffers

Output Capacitor-Less (OCL) Coupling

Custom Memory / Playback Memory

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