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VGA connector

The Video Graphics Array (VGA) connector is a standard connector used for computer video output. Originating with the 1987 IBM PS/2 and its VGA graphics system, the 15-pin connector went on to become ubiquitous on PCs,[1] as well as many monitors, projectors and high-definition television sets.

VGA connector (DE-15/HD-15)


A female DE-15 output in a laptop computer
Type Computer analog video connector
Production history
Designer IBM based on D-subminiature
Designed 1987
Produced 1987–present
Superseded by DVI (1999)
General specifications
Hot pluggable Depends
Video signal RGB video signal plus option H and V sync
Pins 15
Connector DE-15
Data
Data signal I²C data channel for DDC information
Pinout
A female DE15 socket
Pin 1 RED Red video
Pin 2 GREEN Green video
Pin 3 BLUE Blue video
Pin 4 ID2/RES Reserved since E-DDC, formerly monitor id. bit 2
Pin 5 GND Ground (HSync)
Pin 6 RED_RTN Red return
Pin 7 GREEN_RTN Green return
Pin 8 BLUE_RTN Blue return
Pin 9 KEY/PWR +5 V DC (powers EDID EEPROM chip on some monitors), formerly key
Pin 10 GND Ground (VSync, DDC)
Pin 11 ID0/RES Reserved since E-DDC, formerly monitor id. bit 0
Pin 12 ID1/SDA I²C data since DDC2, formerly monitor id. bit 1
Pin 13 HSync Horizontal sync
Pin 14 VSync Vertical sync
Pin 15 ID3/SCL I²C clock since DDC2, formerly monitor id. bit 3
The image and table detail the 15-pin VESA DDC2/E-DDC connector; the diagram's pin numbering is that of a female connector functioning as the graphics adapter output. In the male connector, this pin numbering corresponds with the cable's wire-and-solder side.

Other connectors have been used to carry VGA-compatible signals, such as mini-VGA or BNC, but "VGA connector" typically refers to this design.[2]

Devices continue to be manufactured with VGA connectors, although newer digital interfaces such as DVI, HDMI and DisplayPort are increasingly displacing VGA, and many modern computers and other devices do not include it.[3]

Physical design

The VGA connector is a three-row, 15-pin D-subminiature connector referred to variously as DE-15,[2] HD-15[4] or DB-15. DE-15 is the most accurate common nomenclature under the D-sub specifications: an "E" size D-sub connector, with 15 pins in three rows.

Electrical design

All VGA connectors carry analog RGBHV (red, green, blue, horizontal sync, vertical sync) video signals. Modern connectors also include VESA DDC pins, for identifying attached display devices.

In both its modern and original variants, VGA utilizes multiple scan rates, so attached devices such as monitors are multisync by necessity.

The VGA interface includes no affordances for hot swapping, the ability to connect or disconnect the output device during operation, although in practice this can be done and usually does not cause damage to the hardware or other problems. The VESA DDC specification does, however, include a standard for hot-swapping.[5]

PS/2 signaling

In the original IBM VGA implementation, refresh rates were limited to two vertical (60 and 70 Hz) and three horizontal frequencies, all of which were communicated to the monitor using combinations of different polarity H and V sync signals.[6]: 100 

Some pins on the connector were also different: pin 9 was keyed by plugging the female connector hole, and four pins carried the monitor ID.[6]: 99 

With the implementation of the VESA DDC specification, several of the monitor ID pins were reassigned for use by DDC signaling, and the key pin was replaced with a +5 V DC output per the DDC spec. Devices that comply with the DDC host system standard provide 5 V ± 5%, from 50 mA to 1 A.[7]

PS/55 signaling

The IBM PS/55 Display Adapter redefined pin 9 as "+12V", which signals the monitor to turn on when the system unit is powered on.[8]

EDID

In order to advertise display capabilities VESA has introduced a scheme to redefining VGA connector pins 9, 12, and 15 as a serial bus for a Display Data Channel (DDC).[9]

Cable quality

 
A VGA cable with DE-15 male connector

The same VGA cable can be used with a variety of supported VGA resolutions, ranging from 320×400px @70 Hz, or 320×480px @60 Hz (12.6 MHz of signal bandwidth) to 1280×1024px (SXGA) @85 Hz (160 MHz) and up to 2048×1536px (QXGA) @85 Hz (388 MHz).

There are no standards defining the quality required for each resolution, but higher-quality cables typically contain coaxial wiring and insulation that make them thicker.

While shorter VGA cables are less likely to introduce significant signal degradation, good-quality cable should not suffer from signal crosstalk (whereby signals in one wire induce unwanted currents in adjacent wires) even at greater lengths.

Ghosting occurs when impedance mismatches cause signals to be reflected. A correctly impedance matched cable (75 ohm) should prevent this, however, ghosting with long cables may be caused by equipment with incorrect signal termination or by passive cable splitters rather than the cables themselves.

Alternative connectors

 
VGA BNC connectors

Some high-end monitors and video cards use multiple BNC connectors instead of a single standard VGA connector,[which?] providing a higher quality connection with less crosstalk[10] by utilizing five separate 75 ohm coaxial cables.

Within a 15-pin connector, the red, green, and blue signals (pins 1, 2, 3) cannot be shielded from each other, so crosstalk is possible within the 15-pin interconnect. BNC prevents crosstalk by maintaining full coaxial shielding through the circular connectors, but the connectors are very large and bulky. The requirement to press and turn the plug shell to disconnect requires access space around each connector to allow grasping of each BNC plug shell. Supplementary signals such as DDC are typically not supported with BNC.

 
Mini-VGA port on an Apple iBook

Some laptops and other portable devices use a two-row mini-VGA connector that is much smaller than the three-row DE-15 connector, as well as five separate BNC connectors.

Adapters

 
VGA - Mini VGA adapter

Various adapters can be purchased to convert VGA to other connector types. One common variety is a DVI to VGA adapter, which is possible because many DVI interfaces also carry VGA-compatible analog signals. Adapting from HDMI to VGA directly is not possible because HDMI includes no analog signal. It is the same case for DisplayPort

For conversions to and from digital formats like HDMI or DVI-D, a scan converter is required. VGA outputs to interfaces with different signaling, more complex converters may be used. Most of them need an external power source to operate and are inherently lossy. However, many modern displays are still made with multiple inputs including VGA, in which case adapters are not necessary.

VGA can also be adapted to SCART in some cases, because the signals are electrically compatible if the correct sync rates are set by the host PC. Many modern graphics adapters can modify their signal in software, including refresh rate, sync length, polarity and number of blank lines. Particular issues include interlace support and the use of the resolution 720×576 in PAL countries. Under these restrictive conditions, a simple circuit to combine the VGA separate synchronization signals into SCART composite sync may suffice.[11][12]

Extenders

A VGA extender is an electronic device that increases the signal strength from a VGA port, most often from a computer. They are often used in schools, businesses, and homes when multiple monitors are being run off one VGA port, or if the cable between the monitor and the computer will be excessively long (often pictures appear blurry or have minor artifacts if the cable runs too far without an extender). VGA extenders are sometimes called VGA boosters.

See also

References

  1. ^ Engst, Adam; Pogue, David (23 November 1999). Crossing Platforms – A Macintosh/Windows Phrasebook: A Dictionary for Strangers in a Strange Land. O'Reilly Media. ISBN 978-1-4919-1679-7. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  2. ^ a b "VGA Cables - A Complete Buyers' Guide". RS Components. Retrieved 16 August 2020. The terminology here is sometimes used rather interchangeably when it comes to labelling various types of VGA cable and can be a little vague. However, the basic or standard VGA connector type will usually be referred to as some variant of the following: DE-15, HD15, VGA plug, SVGA plug, D-Sub 15 or D-Subminiature, or the more generic RGB connector.
  3. ^ Shah, Agam (31 July 2012). "VGA ports bowing out of home computers, lingering in the workplace". Computerworld. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
  4. ^ (PDF). CablesToGo. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 October 2021.
  5. ^ VESA DDC/CI Standard Version 1.1. 2004. p. 31. DDC/CI supports hot plugging, provided the display can detect a disconnection of the video cable
  6. ^ a b "Video Subsystem (Type 1)". (PDF) (First ed.). IBM. May 1988. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 May 2018. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  7. ^ VESA Enhanced Display Data Channel Standard Version 1.1. Video Electronics Standards Association. 24 March 2004. p. 18.
  8. ^ "Japanese Display Adapters". Ardent Tool of Capitalism. Retrieved 5 February 2023.
  9. ^ "Understanding EDID - Extended Display Identification Data". Extron. Retrieved 19 May 2022.
  10. ^ "What is VGA connector & how to use it". Tyfon Tech. 8 February 2018. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  11. ^ "The Nexus: Projects - VGA to SCART Converter". Nexusuk.org. 26 June 2013. Retrieved 21 October 2013.
  12. ^ "VGA to TV converter page". Epanorama.net. Retrieved 21 October 2013.

External links

  • DE-9 pinout
  • DE-15 VGA VESA DDC pinout
  • DE-15 to 5 BNC

connector, graphics, standard, video, graphics, array, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspap. For the graphics standard see Video Graphics Array This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources VGA connector news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Video Graphics Array VGA connector is a standard connector used for computer video output Originating with the 1987 IBM PS 2 and its VGA graphics system the 15 pin connector went on to become ubiquitous on PCs 1 as well as many monitors projectors and high definition television sets VGA connector DE 15 HD 15 A female DE 15 output in a laptop computerTypeComputer analog video connectorProduction historyDesignerIBM based on D subminiatureDesigned1987Produced1987 presentSuperseded byDVI 1999 General specificationsHot pluggableDependsVideo signalRGB video signal plus option H and V syncPins15ConnectorDE 15DataData signalI C data channel for DDC informationPinoutA female DE15 socketPin 1REDRed videoPin 2GREENGreen videoPin 3BLUEBlue videoPin 4ID2 RESReserved since E DDC formerly monitor id bit 2Pin 5GNDGround HSync Pin 6RED RTNRed returnPin 7GREEN RTNGreen returnPin 8BLUE RTNBlue returnPin 9KEY PWR 5 V DC powers EDID EEPROM chip on some monitors formerly keyPin 10GNDGround VSync DDC Pin 11ID0 RESReserved since E DDC formerly monitor id bit 0Pin 12ID1 SDAI C data since DDC2 formerly monitor id bit 1Pin 13HSyncHorizontal syncPin 14VSyncVertical syncPin 15ID3 SCLI C clock since DDC2 formerly monitor id bit 3The image and table detail the 15 pin VESA DDC2 E DDC connector the diagram s pin numbering is that of a female connector functioning as the graphics adapter output In the male connector this pin numbering corresponds with the cable s wire and solder side Other connectors have been used to carry VGA compatible signals such as mini VGA or BNC but VGA connector typically refers to this design 2 Devices continue to be manufactured with VGA connectors although newer digital interfaces such as DVI HDMI and DisplayPort are increasingly displacing VGA and many modern computers and other devices do not include it 3 Contents 1 Physical design 2 Electrical design 2 1 PS 2 signaling 2 2 PS 55 signaling 2 3 EDID 3 Cable quality 4 Alternative connectors 5 Adapters 6 Extenders 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksPhysical design EditThe VGA connector is a three row 15 pin D subminiature connector referred to variously as DE 15 2 HD 15 4 or DB 15 DE 15 is the most accurate common nomenclature under the D sub specifications an E size D sub connector with 15 pins in three rows Electrical design EditAll VGA connectors carry analog RGBHV red green blue horizontal sync vertical sync video signals Modern connectors also include VESA DDC pins for identifying attached display devices In both its modern and original variants VGA utilizes multiple scan rates so attached devices such as monitors are multisync by necessity The VGA interface includes no affordances for hot swapping the ability to connect or disconnect the output device during operation although in practice this can be done and usually does not cause damage to the hardware or other problems The VESA DDC specification does however include a standard for hot swapping 5 PS 2 signaling Edit In the original IBM VGA implementation refresh rates were limited to two vertical 60 and 70 Hz and three horizontal frequencies all of which were communicated to the monitor using combinations of different polarity H and V sync signals 6 100 Some pins on the connector were also different pin 9 was keyed by plugging the female connector hole and four pins carried the monitor ID 6 99 With the implementation of the VESA DDC specification several of the monitor ID pins were reassigned for use by DDC signaling and the key pin was replaced with a 5 V DC output per the DDC spec Devices that comply with the DDC host system standard provide 5 V 5 from 50 mA to 1 A 7 PS 55 signaling Edit The IBM PS 55 Display Adapter redefined pin 9 as 12V which signals the monitor to turn on when the system unit is powered on 8 EDID Edit Further information Display Data Channel and EDID In order to advertise display capabilities VESA has introduced a scheme to redefining VGA connector pins 9 12 and 15 as a serial bus for a Display Data Channel DDC 9 Cable quality EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message A VGA cable with DE 15 male connector The same VGA cable can be used with a variety of supported VGA resolutions ranging from 320 400px 70 Hz or 320 480px 60 Hz 12 6 MHz of signal bandwidth to 1280 1024px SXGA 85 Hz 160 MHz and up to 2048 1536px QXGA 85 Hz 388 MHz There are no standards defining the quality required for each resolution but higher quality cables typically contain coaxial wiring and insulation that make them thicker While shorter VGA cables are less likely to introduce significant signal degradation good quality cable should not suffer from signal crosstalk whereby signals in one wire induce unwanted currents in adjacent wires even at greater lengths Ghosting occurs when impedance mismatches cause signals to be reflected A correctly impedance matched cable 75 ohm should prevent this however ghosting with long cables may be caused by equipment with incorrect signal termination or by passive cable splitters rather than the cables themselves Alternative connectors Edit VGA BNC connectors Some high end monitors and video cards use multiple BNC connectors instead of a single standard VGA connector which providing a higher quality connection with less crosstalk 10 by utilizing five separate 75 ohm coaxial cables Within a 15 pin connector the red green and blue signals pins 1 2 3 cannot be shielded from each other so crosstalk is possible within the 15 pin interconnect BNC prevents crosstalk by maintaining full coaxial shielding through the circular connectors but the connectors are very large and bulky The requirement to press and turn the plug shell to disconnect requires access space around each connector to allow grasping of each BNC plug shell Supplementary signals such as DDC are typically not supported with BNC Mini VGA port on an Apple iBook Some laptops and other portable devices use a two row mini VGA connector that is much smaller than the three row DE 15 connector as well as five separate BNC connectors Adapters Edit VGA Mini VGA adapter Various adapters can be purchased to convert VGA to other connector types One common variety is a DVI to VGA adapter which is possible because many DVI interfaces also carry VGA compatible analog signals Adapting from HDMI to VGA directly is not possible because HDMI includes no analog signal It is the same case for DisplayPortFor conversions to and from digital formats like HDMI or DVI D a scan converter is required VGA outputs to interfaces with different signaling more complex converters may be used Most of them need an external power source to operate and are inherently lossy However many modern displays are still made with multiple inputs including VGA in which case adapters are not necessary VGA can also be adapted to SCART in some cases because the signals are electrically compatible if the correct sync rates are set by the host PC Many modern graphics adapters can modify their signal in software including refresh rate sync length polarity and number of blank lines Particular issues include interlace support and the use of the resolution 720 576 in PAL countries Under these restrictive conditions a simple circuit to combine the VGA separate synchronization signals into SCART composite sync may suffice 11 12 Extenders EditA VGA extender is an electronic device that increases the signal strength from a VGA port most often from a computer They are often used in schools businesses and homes when multiple monitors are being run off one VGA port or if the cable between the monitor and the computer will be excessively long often pictures appear blurry or have minor artifacts if the cable runs too far without an extender VGA extenders are sometimes called VGA boosters See also EditComponent video Extended display identification data EDID List of video connectors Super Video Graphics Array SVGA References Edit Engst Adam Pogue David 23 November 1999 Crossing Platforms A Macintosh Windows Phrasebook A Dictionary for Strangers in a Strange Land O Reilly Media ISBN 978 1 4919 1679 7 Retrieved 16 February 2021 a b VGA Cables A Complete Buyers Guide RS Components Retrieved 16 August 2020 The terminology here is sometimes used rather interchangeably when it comes to labelling various types of VGA cable and can be a little vague However the basic or standard VGA connector type will usually be referred to as some variant of the following DE 15 HD15 VGA plug SVGA plug D Sub 15 or D Subminiature or the more generic RGB connector Shah Agam 31 July 2012 VGA ports bowing out of home computers lingering in the workplace Computerworld Retrieved 16 August 2020 Summary of Digital and Analog Connectors PDF CablesToGo Archived from the original PDF on 31 October 2021 VESA DDC CI Standard Version 1 1 2004 p 31 DDC CI supports hot plugging provided the display can detect a disconnection of the video cable a b Video Subsystem Type 1 IBM Personal System 2 Hardware Interface Technical Reference PDF First ed IBM May 1988 Archived from the original PDF on 14 May 2018 Retrieved 16 February 2021 VESA Enhanced Display Data Channel Standard Version 1 1 Video Electronics Standards Association 24 March 2004 p 18 Japanese Display Adapters Ardent Tool of Capitalism Retrieved 5 February 2023 Understanding EDID Extended Display Identification Data Extron Retrieved 19 May 2022 What is VGA connector amp how to use it Tyfon Tech 8 February 2018 Retrieved 26 July 2022 The Nexus Projects VGA to SCART Converter Nexusuk org 26 June 2013 Retrieved 21 October 2013 VGA to TV converter page Epanorama net Retrieved 21 October 2013 External links EditDE 9 pinout DE 15 VGA VESA DDC pinout DE 15 to 5 BNC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title VGA connector amp oldid 1138222186, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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