CED-1 Addendum-2
ELECTRONIC/MECHANICAL SYSTEMS DESCRIPTION
ELECTRONICS: System Control and Signal Processing
Fig. 1-4 is an electrical systems block diagram of the RCA SFT100
VideoDisc player. Most electronic circuits in the VideoDisc player
can be separated into two basic functional categories: SYSTEM
CONTROL and SIGNAL PROCESSING.
The system control electronics are on the PW 500 circuit board,
which is mounted above the VideoDisc turntable. A microcom-
puter integrated circuit is the heart of the system control function.
The microcomputer receives input commands from the user-oper-
ated function switches and, in turn, controls the operation of the
player. The system
control
microcomputer
also decodes the
Digital Auxillary Information (DAXI) on the VideoDisc to develop
the elapsed play time readout and to control forward movement af
the pickup arm assembly during the "play" mode.
The signal processing circuits are equipped with several inte-
grated circuits and discrete devices. These are mounted on the
PW 3000 circuit board and on the pickup arm assembly. The sig-
nal processing circuits detect the video and audio information on
the VideoDisc, demodulate it and process it through a comb-filter
circuit, and then modulates it onto either a Channel 3 or Channel
4 television RF carrier. This modulated television RF signal is then
connected through coaxial cable to any NTSC television receiver.
Functional Operation
Operation of the VideoDisc
player is totally controlled by the
system contro! microcomputer. When the user selects an operat-
ing mode — PLAY, RAPID ACCESS FORWARD or REVERSE,
VISUAL SEARCH FORWARD or REVERSE, PAUSE, or LOAD —
input commands related to that mode are fed to the microcom-
puter. The microcomputer decodes these input commands and, in
turn, uses the decoded information to "direct" other system con-
trol electronics to establish the electrical conditions needed to
perform the selected operation mode. The state of all signal pro-
cessing circuits is controlled by the Not Squelch (SQ) output of
the microcomputer. When the Not Squelch line goes to a logic
"Lo" state, all of the signal-processing electronic circuits are dis-
abled (squelched).
The system contro! microcomputer also has direct control over
the pickup arm assembly. This involves: — the servo motor opera-
tion, moving the arm forward (toward center of disc) during nor-
mal play; — the stylus lifter operation, raising and lowering the
stylus as the various functions are initiated; — and the stylus
kicker circuits, enabling
the system to provide the VISUAL
SEARCH feature. The microcomputer also controls the direction
of the servo system. In the RAPID ACCESS
REVERSE,
and
VISUAL SEARCH REVERSE operating modes, the microcomputer
instructs the servo system to operate in the reverse mode.
The system control microcomputer also generates the elapsed
play time display. The time display information is developed from
a Digital Auxiliary Information (DAXI) signal. This signal is pre-
recorded on the VideoDisc on line 17 of each vertical field. The
DAXI signal includes a field identification number that is decoded
by the system control microcomputer. This decoded information
is used by the microcomputer to develop the elapsed time display.
The БАХ! code is not present іп the RAPID ACCESS FORWARD
and REVERSE operating modes because the stylus is lifted from
the disc. Therefore, during these two modes of operation the time
display must be artifically maintained so that the approximate
elapsed time of the program material can be tracked while the
stylus is lifted and the arm Is moved in either direction across the
disc. This is accomplished by a "photo interrupter" circuit. This
Circuit computes the approximate elapsed time by tracking the
position of the arm relative to the disc radius.
The signal processing electronics on the pickup arm assembly
detect information recorded on the VideoDisc. The arm also con-
tains components for providing the features of VISUAL SEARCH
FORWARD and REVERSE as well as Locked Groove protection.
They are: the "stylus kicker" coils which will cause the stylus to
skip two grooves of the VideoDisc; the "armstretcher" transducer
which corrects for timebase variations in the recovered chromi-
nance and luminance signals.
The AO signal Is fed to the system control electronics (PW 500
board) and to the signal processing electronics (PW 3000 board).
On the signal processing electronics board the AO signal is ap-
plied to two FM demodulator ICs. one for audio and the other for
video. The audio demodulator IC converts the AO signal audio
carrier information into a discrete audio signal. The audio signal
is fed to the sound modulator, which frequency modulates a 4.5-
MHz sound carrier that is fed to the RF Modulator IC.
The audio demodulator IC also contains a Defect Detector circuit.
This circuit prevents audio noise if the audio carrier of the АО sig-
nal is momentarily interrupted by microscopic debris on the disc
surface.
Before the AO signal is applied to the Video Demodulator IC, it is
passed through a NonLinear Aperture Correction (NLAC) circuit.
The NLAC circuit removes the 716 kHz audio modulation from the
video information.
!t does this by phase inverting the audio
modulation, and then adding it back to the original signal. This
cancels out the audio modulation in the carrier information.
The video FM carrier, with the audio modulation removed is ap-
plied to the Video Demodulator IC which demodulates the video
carrier. The video demadulator also contains a defect detection
circuit, which allows a portion of the previous horizontal line to be
inserted when a defect caused by loss of carrier occurs.
The output of the video demodulator, being composite video with
"buried" subcarrier chroma, is then applied to a comb-filter cir-
cuit. The comb filter dynamically separates chrominance
and
luminance information from the composite video information.
The output of the comb
filter is "combed"
chrominance
and
"combed"
luminance. The combed chrominance output signal
contains low frequency luminance information and the БАХ! sig-
nal which is transmitted with each vertical field. After bandpass-
ing the 1 to 2 MHz chroma signal, the two remaining signals (low
frequency luminance апа DAXI) are separated by low pass filters.
The low frequency luminance information is recombined with the
~ "combed" luminance information to provide the luminance out-
put. Vertical Detail Output (VDO) containing the ОАХ! signal is
supplied via the DAXI buffer IC to the system control microcom-
puter.
The luminance and chrominance information is coupled from the
comb-filter circuit to the video converter circuit. The video con-
verter up-converts the 1.53-MHz chrominance information to 3.58-
MHz. The 3.58-MHz chroma and the luminance information are
then combined. The composite video signal is then supplied to
the RF modulator where the audio FM carrier is added and a RF
signal on Channel 3 or Channel 4 is developed for output to a
standard NTSC television receiver.
Also developed in the video converter stage is the drive signal for
the "armstretcher" time base corrector circuit. The correction sig-
nai is developed
by comparing
the up-converted
3.58-MHz
chroma information with a crystal controlled 3.58MHz reference
oscillator. Any phase or frequency difference between the two
1-7А
Need help?
Do you have a question about the SelectaVision VideoDisc SFT 100 and is the answer not in the manual?