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Motorola 6847

The MC6847 is a Video Display Generator (VDG) first introduced by Motorola in 1978[3] and used in the TRS-80 Color Computer,[4] Dragon 32/64,[5] Laser 200,[6] TRS-80 MC-10/Matra Alice,[7] NEC PC-6000 series,[8] Acorn Atom,[9] and the APF Imagination Machine,[10] among others. It is a relatively simple display generator intended for NTSC television output: capable of displaying alphanumeric text, semigraphics,[11] and raster graphics contained within a roughly square display matrix 256 pixels wide by 192 lines high.

Motorola MC6847 in ceramic package.
Motorola MC6847 in plastic package
Motorola MC6847T1 (XC80652) in plastic package
Mitsubishi clone M5C6847
Motorola 6847 Pinout[1]
MC6847T1 Pinout[2]

The ROM includes a 5 x 7 pixel font, compatible with 6-bit ASCII. Effects such as inverse video or colored text (green on dark green; orange on dark orange) are possible.[12]

The hardware palette is composed of twelve colors:[13] black, green, yellow, blue, red, buff (almost-but-not-quite white), cyan, magenta, and orange (two extra colors, dark green and dark orange, are the ink colours for all alphanumeric text mode characters, and a light orange color is available as an alternative to green as the background color). According to the MC6847 datasheet, the colors are formed by the combination of three signals: with 6 possible levels, (or with 3 possible levels) and (or with 3 possible levels), based on the YPbPr colorspace, and then converted for output into a NTSC analog signal.[12]

The low display resolution is a necessity of using television sets as display monitors. Making the display wider risked cutting off characters due to overscan. Compressing more dots into the display window would easily exceed the resolution of the television and be useless.[14][15]

Variants edit

According to the datasheets, there are non-interlaced (6847) and interlaced (6847Y) variants, plus the 6847T1 (non-interlaced only). The chips can be found with ceramic (L suffix), plastic (P suffix) or CERDIP (S suffix) packages.

Die pictures edit

Signal levels and color palette edit

The chip outputs a NTSC-compatible progressive scan signal composed of one field of 262 lines 60 times per second.

According to the MC6847 datasheet,[16][17] colors are formed by the combination of three signals:   luminance,   chroma and   chroma, according to the YPbPr color space. These signals can drive a TV directly, or be used with a NTSC modulator (Motorola MC1372) for RF output.

  may assume one of these voltages: "Black" = 0.72V; "White Low" = 0.65V; "White Medium" = 0.54V; "White High" = 0.42V.

  (or  ) and   (or  ) may be: "Output Low" = 1.0V; "R" = 1.5V; "Input High" = 2.0V.

The following table shows the signal values used:[16][17]

Color      
Green 0.54 1.0 1.0
Yellow 0.42 1.0 1.5
Blue 0.65 2.0 1.5
Red 0.65 1.5 2.0
Buff 0.42 1.5 1.5
Cyan 0.54 1.0 1.5
Magenta 0.54 2.0 2.0
Orange 0.54 1.0 2.0
Black 0.72 1.5 1.5
Dark Green 0.72 1.0 1.0
Dark Orange 0.72 1.0 2.0

Notes:

1) The colors shown are adjusted for maximum brightness and only approximate (different color spaces are used on TV - BT601 and web pages - sRGB).[citation needed]

2) At least on the Color Computer 1 and 2, the alternate palette of text modes (actually the text portion of semigraphic modes) was dark pink (or dark red) on light pink, of shades not listed here (and no dark orange), whereas the Color Computer 3, with a different chip, made it dark orange on orange.

The first eight colors of this table were numbered 0 to 7 in the upper bits of the character set (when bit 7 was set, bits 4-6 represented the color number), but ColorBASIC's numbering was 1 higher than that in text mode, as it used 0 for black.

Video modes edit

Possible MC6847 video display modes:[1]

Video Mode Resolution Colors Bytes
Mode 1: Alpha Modes Internal Alphanumerics 32 x 16 (8x12 pixel characters) 2 (GDG or ODO) 512
Internal Alphanumerics Inverted
External Alphanumerics
External Alphanumerics Inverted
Semigraphics 4 (SG4) 64 × 32 8 (BGYBRWCMO) 512
Semigraphics 6 (SG6) 64 × 48 8 (BGYBRWCMO)
Mode 2: Graphics Modes Color Graphics One (CG1) 64 × 64 4 (GYBR or WCMO) 1024
Resolution Graphics One (RG1) 128 × 64 2 (GW or BW)
Color Graphics Two (CG2) 4 (GYBR or WCMO) 2048
Resolution Graphics Two (RG2) 128 × 96 2 (GW or BW) 1536
Color Graphics Three (CG3) 4 (GYBR or WCMO) 3072
Resolution Graphics Three (RG3) 128 × 192 2 (GW or BW)
Color Graphics Six (CG6) 4 (GYBR or WCMO) 6144
Resolution Graphics Six (RG6) 256 × 192 2 (GW or BW)

Character generator edit

The built-in character generator ROM offers 64 ASCII characters with 5x7 pixels. Characters can be green or orange, on dark green or orange background, with a possible "invert" attribute (dark character on a bright background).[1]

MC6847 Character Generator Alphanumeric Characters
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
0x @ A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O
1x P Q R S T U V W X Y Z [ \ ]
2x ! " # $ % & ' ( ) * + , - . /
3x 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 : ; < = > ?
4x @ A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O
5x P Q R S T U V W X Y Z [ \ ]
6x ! " # $ % & ' ( ) * + , - . /
7x 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 : ; < = > ?

The internal character rom is organized as a matrix of 64x35 (2240 bits) where each column consists of the 35 bytes (5x7) needed to form a character. The character bits are stored sequentially in column order, that is 7 bits of column 0 followed by the 7 bits of column 1, and so on.

The following picture shows the bits overlapped on top of the rom array, with the ones of the first character (@) in different colours to highlight the organization.

 

Motorola offered its customers the possibility of ordering the MC6847 with the internal ROM masked with a custom pattern. The customer would provide the ROM pattern on MCM2708 or MCM2716 PROMS or on a MDOS formatted 8-inch single sided, single density floppy disk. Motorola would then send 10 verification units for the customer to verify the ROM pattern.

The MC6847 also supports an external character ROM. The Dragon 200-E, a spanish variant of the Dragon 64 is a great example of this. The machine had a daughterboard that fits on the MC6847 socket and had the VDG plus a 2532 EPROM and some decoding logic.

The updated version of the chip (MC6847T1) had a 96 character ROM that included lowercase characters.[2]

Here you can see the default MC6847 and MC6847T1 default character sets, the Dragon 200-E one and the Dragon 200-E daughterboard.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "MC6847/MC6847Y Video Display Generator, Motorola, 1984" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2019-03-16. Retrieved 2017-08-19.
  2. ^ a b "MC6847T1 Datasheet" (PDF). Motorola. 1985. (PDF) from the original on 2021-01-22. Retrieved 2022-05-15.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2023-05-28.
  4. ^ "Color Computer Technical Reference Manual - III THEORY OF OPERATION". from the original on 2020-01-29. Retrieved 2022-06-08.
  5. ^ "Dragon 32". from the original on 2021-07-24. Retrieved 2022-06-08.
  6. ^ "old-computers.com: VIDEO TECHNOLOGY > LASER 200 / 210". from the original on 2022-06-08. Retrieved 2022-06-08.
  7. ^ "old-computers.com: - TANDY RADIO SHACK > MC 10". from the original on 2022-06-08. Retrieved 2022-06-08.
  8. ^ "old-computers.com: NEC > PC 6001". from the original on 2022-08-03. Retrieved 2022-06-08.
  9. ^ "Yet another computer museum - The Acorn Atom". from the original on 2022-07-27. Retrieved 2022-06-08.
  10. ^ "Home computer & video game museum: APF Imagination Machine". from the original on 2022-01-16. Retrieved 2022-06-08.
  11. ^ . February 14, 2021. Archived from the original on 14 February 2021.
  12. ^ a b "Datasheet Archive MC6847 datasheet download". www.datasheetarchive.com. from the original on 2022-02-25. Retrieved 2022-02-25.
  13. ^ "Motorola VDG Colours". hcvgm.org. from the original on 2021-02-23. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
  14. ^ Benchoff, Brian (29 January 2016). "VGA In Memoriam". Hackaday. from the original on 7 September 2020. Retrieved 2 September 2020.
  15. ^ Posey, Bruce Charles (1982). Graphics Using the Motorola 6847 Integrated Circuit. W.S.U. Printing Service. from the original on 2022-03-04. Retrieved 2020-09-16.
  16. ^ a b "MC6847* datasheet & applicatoin notes - Datasheet Archive". www.datasheetarchive.com. from the original on 2022-07-10. Retrieved 2021-05-15.
  17. ^ a b MC6847/MC6847Y VIDEO DISPLAY GENERATOR (VDG). Motorola Semiconductor Products Inc. 1984. p. 3.

motorola, 6847, mc6847, video, display, generator, first, introduced, motorola, 1978, used, color, computer, dragon, laser, matra, alice, 6000, series, acorn, atom, imagination, machine, among, others, relatively, simple, display, generator, intended, ntsc, te. The MC6847 is a Video Display Generator VDG first introduced by Motorola in 1978 3 and used in the TRS 80 Color Computer 4 Dragon 32 64 5 Laser 200 6 TRS 80 MC 10 Matra Alice 7 NEC PC 6000 series 8 Acorn Atom 9 and the APF Imagination Machine 10 among others It is a relatively simple display generator intended for NTSC television output capable of displaying alphanumeric text semigraphics 11 and raster graphics contained within a roughly square display matrix 256 pixels wide by 192 lines high Motorola MC6847 in ceramic package Motorola MC6847 in plastic package Motorola MC6847T1 XC80652 in plastic package Mitsubishi clone M5C6847 Motorola 6847 Pinout 1 MC6847T1 Pinout 2 The ROM includes a 5 x 7 pixel font compatible with 6 bit ASCII Effects such as inverse video or colored text green on dark green orange on dark orange are possible 12 The hardware palette is composed of twelve colors 13 black green yellow blue red buff almost but not quite white cyan magenta and orange two extra colors dark green and dark orange are the ink colours for all alphanumeric text mode characters and a light orange color is available as an alternative to green as the background color According to the MC6847 datasheet the colors are formed by the combination of three signals Y displaystyle Y with 6 possible levels R Y displaystyle R Y or ϕ A displaystyle phi A with 3 possible levels and B Y displaystyle B Y or ϕ B displaystyle phi B with 3 possible levels based on the YPbPr colorspace and then converted for output into a NTSC analog signal 12 The low display resolution is a necessity of using television sets as display monitors Making the display wider risked cutting off characters due to overscan Compressing more dots into the display window would easily exceed the resolution of the television and be useless 14 15 Contents 1 Variants 2 Die pictures 3 Signal levels and color palette 4 Video modes 5 Character generator 6 See also 7 ReferencesVariants editAccording to the datasheets there are non interlaced 6847 and interlaced 6847Y variants plus the 6847T1 non interlaced only The chips can be found with ceramic L suffix plastic P suffix or CERDIP S suffix packages Die pictures editMC6847 die nbsp MC6847 Die metal layer nbsp MC6847 Die base layerSignal levels and color palette editThe chip outputs a NTSC compatible progressive scan signal composed of one field of 262 lines 60 times per second According to the MC6847 datasheet 16 17 colors are formed by the combination of three signals Y displaystyle Y nbsp luminance ϕ A displaystyle phi A nbsp chroma and ϕ B displaystyle phi B nbsp chroma according to the YPbPr color space These signals can drive a TV directly or be used with a NTSC modulator Motorola MC1372 for RF output Y displaystyle Y nbsp may assume one of these voltages Black 0 72V White Low 0 65V White Medium 0 54V White High 0 42V ϕ A displaystyle phi A nbsp or R Y displaystyle R Y nbsp and ϕ B displaystyle phi B nbsp or B Y displaystyle B Y nbsp may be Output Low 1 0V R 1 5V Input High 2 0V The following table shows the signal values used 16 17 Color Y displaystyle Y nbsp ϕ A displaystyle phi A nbsp ϕ B displaystyle phi B nbsp Green 0 54 1 0 1 0 Yellow 0 42 1 0 1 5 Blue 0 65 2 0 1 5 Red 0 65 1 5 2 0 Buff 0 42 1 5 1 5 Cyan 0 54 1 0 1 5 Magenta 0 54 2 0 2 0 Orange 0 54 1 0 2 0 Black 0 72 1 5 1 5 Dark Green 0 72 1 0 1 0 Dark Orange 0 72 1 0 2 0 Notes 1 The colors shown are adjusted for maximum brightness and only approximate different color spaces are used on TV BT601 and web pages sRGB citation needed 2 At least on the Color Computer 1 and 2 the alternate palette of text modes actually the text portion of semigraphic modes was dark pink or dark red on light pink of shades not listed here and no dark orange whereas the Color Computer 3 with a different chip made it dark orange on orange The first eight colors of this table were numbered 0 to 7 in the upper bits of the character set when bit 7 was set bits 4 6 represented the color number but ColorBASIC s numbering was 1 higher than that in text mode as it used 0 for black Video modes editPossible MC6847 video display modes 1 Video Mode Resolution Colors Bytes Mode 1 Alpha Modes Internal Alphanumerics 32 x 16 8x12 pixel characters 2 G DG or O DO 512 Internal Alphanumerics Inverted External Alphanumerics External Alphanumerics Inverted Semigraphics 4 SG4 64 32 8 BG Y B R W C M O 512 Semigraphics 6 SG6 64 48 8 BG Y B R W C M O Mode 2 Graphics Modes Color Graphics One CG1 64 64 4 G Y B R or W C M O 1024 Resolution Graphics One RG1 128 64 2 G W or BW Color Graphics Two CG2 4 G Y B R or W C M O 2048 Resolution Graphics Two RG2 128 96 2 G W or BW 1536 Color Graphics Three CG3 4 G Y B R or W C M O 3072 Resolution Graphics Three RG3 128 192 2 G W or BW Color Graphics Six CG6 4 G Y B R or W C M O 6144 Resolution Graphics Six RG6 256 192 2 G W or BW Character generator editThe built in character generator ROM offers 64 ASCII characters with 5x7 pixels Characters can be green or orange on dark green or orange background with a possible invert attribute dark character on a bright background 1 MC6847 Character Generator Alphanumeric Characters 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F 0x A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O 1x P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 2x amp 3x 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 lt gt 4x A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O 5x P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 6x amp 7x 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 lt gt The internal character rom is organized as a matrix of 64x35 2240 bits where each column consists of the 35 bytes 5x7 needed to form a character The character bits are stored sequentially in column order that is 7 bits of column 0 followed by the 7 bits of column 1 and so on The following picture shows the bits overlapped on top of the rom array with the ones of the first character in different colours to highlight the organization nbsp Motorola offered its customers the possibility of ordering the MC6847 with the internal ROM masked with a custom pattern The customer would provide the ROM pattern on MCM2708 or MCM2716 PROMS or on a MDOS formatted 8 inch single sided single density floppy disk Motorola would then send 10 verification units for the customer to verify the ROM pattern The MC6847 also supports an external character ROM The Dragon 200 E a spanish variant of the Dragon 64 is a great example of this The machine had a daughterboard that fits on the MC6847 socket and had the VDG plus a 2532 EPROM and some decoding logic The updated version of the chip MC6847T1 had a 96 character ROM that included lowercase characters 2 Here you can see the default MC6847 and MC6847T1 default character sets the Dragon 200 E one and the Dragon 200 E daughterboard Character sets and external ROM nbsp Standard character set nbsp MC6847T1 Standard character set nbsp Dragon 200 E character set nbsp Dragon 200 E daughterboardSee also editMotorola 6845 video address generator Thomson EF9345 TMS9918 MOS Technology VIC II List of home computers by video hardwareReferences edit a b c MC6847 MC6847Y Video Display Generator Motorola 1984 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2019 03 16 Retrieved 2017 08 19 a b MC6847T1 Datasheet PDF Motorola 1985 Archived PDF from the original on 2021 01 22 Retrieved 2022 05 15 1 History of GPU The Consumer 3D Graphics Cards 1976 1995 Archived from the original on 2023 05 28 Color Computer Technical Reference Manual III THEORY OF OPERATION Archived from the original on 2020 01 29 Retrieved 2022 06 08 Dragon 32 Archived from the original on 2021 07 24 Retrieved 2022 06 08 old computers com VIDEO TECHNOLOGY gt LASER 200 210 Archived from the original on 2022 06 08 Retrieved 2022 06 08 old computers com TANDY RADIO SHACK gt MC 10 Archived from the original on 2022 06 08 Retrieved 2022 06 08 old computers com NEC gt PC 6001 Archived from the original on 2022 08 03 Retrieved 2022 06 08 Yet another computer museum The Acorn Atom Archived from the original on 2022 07 27 Retrieved 2022 06 08 Home computer amp video game museum APF Imagination Machine Archived from the original on 2022 01 16 Retrieved 2022 06 08 Semi graphics 6 display mode February 14 2021 Archived from the original on 14 February 2021 a b Datasheet Archive MC6847 datasheet download www datasheetarchive com Archived from the original on 2022 02 25 Retrieved 2022 02 25 Motorola VDG Colours hcvgm org Archived from the original on 2021 02 23 Retrieved 2021 05 07 Benchoff Brian 29 January 2016 VGA In Memoriam Hackaday Archived from the original on 7 September 2020 Retrieved 2 September 2020 Posey Bruce Charles 1982 Graphics Using the Motorola 6847 Integrated Circuit W S U Printing Service Archived from the original on 2022 03 04 Retrieved 2020 09 16 a b MC6847 datasheet amp applicatoin notes Datasheet Archive www datasheetarchive com Archived from the original on 2022 07 10 Retrieved 2021 05 15 a b MC6847 MC6847Y VIDEO DISPLAY GENERATOR VDG Motorola Semiconductor Products Inc 1984 p 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Motorola 6847 amp oldid 1218043264, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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