Jump to content

TEA1002

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
TEA1002 on a Mattel Aquarius motherboard

The TEA1002 is a PAL video encoder chip[1] produced by Mullard in 1982 and used on the Mattel Aquarius computer, the AlphaTantel Prestel adapter and the Microvector 256 color graphics display interface for Nascom and Gemini computers.[2][3][4][5][6] It was also used on teletext decoders and color bar generators associated with video test equipment.[7][8]

It generates 16 colors based on Luminance, Chrominance and Saturation, usually with the 8 basic colors being similar to the EBU 75% color bars.[9]

Levels

[edit]

According to the TEA1002 datasheet,[1][9] colors are formed by the combination of three signals, roughly equivalent to the HSL colorspace:

Internally colors are stored in a 4-bit RGBI arrangement. There are three bits for the RGB components (generating 8 primary colors at full saturation but 75% luminance - similar to the EBU colour bars) and an inverter logic input bit that controls a variation of the base color (a 75% Luminance decrease for white; a 50% Chroma saturation decrease for all colors).

The following table lists the internal signals and shows an approximation of the generated colors, as seen on a web standard sRGB monitor. Colors could be different when seen on an analog PAL CRT television.

TEA1002 Logic inputs and composite video output (configured for 75% EBU colour bars)[9]
Color R G B INV Luminance (%) Chroma (º) Chroma (%)
Black 0 0 0 0 0.0 - -
Red 1 0 0 0 22.5 103 ±48
Green 0 1 0 0 44.0 241 ±44
Yellow 1 1 0 0 66.5 167 ±33
Blue 0 0 1 0 8.5 347 ±33
Magenta 1 0 1 0 31.0 61 ±44
Cyan 0 1 1 0 52.5 283 ±48
White 1 1 1 0 100.0 - -
Grey 0 0 0 1 75.0 - -
Cyan 1 0 0 1 52.5 283 ±24
Magenta 0 1 0 1 31.0 61 ±22
Blue 1 1 0 1 8.5 347 ±17
Yellow 0 0 1 1 66.5 167 ±17
Green 1 0 0 1 44.0 241 ±22
Red 0 1 1 1 22.5 103 ±24
Black 1 1 1 1 0.0 - -


An alternate configuration of the chip allows it to output 95% luminance color bars - similar to BBC colour bars, more suited for usage in teletext decoders.[1]

TEA1002 Logic inputs and composite video output (configured for 95% BBC colour bars)[9]
Color R G B INV Luminance (%) Chroma (º) Chroma (%)
Black 0 0 0 0 0.0 - -
Red 1 0 0 0 47.5 103 ±48
Green 0 1 0 0 69 241 ±44
Yellow 1 1 0 0 91.5 167 ±33
Blue 0 0 1 0 33.5 347 ±33
Magenta 1 0 0 0 56 61 ±44
Cyan 0 1 1 0 77.5 283 ±48
White 1 1 1 0 100.0 - -
Grey 0 0 0 1 100.0 - -
Cyan 1 0 0 1 77.5 283 ±24
Magenta 0 1 0 1 56 61 ±22
Blue 1 1 0 1 33.5 347 ±17
Yellow 0 0 1 1 91.5 167 ±17
Green 1 0 0 1 69 241 ±22
Red 0 1 1 1 47.5 103 ±24
Black 1 1 1 1 0.0 - -

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c TEA1002 PAL Colour Encoder and Video Summer. Mullard. 1982.
  2. ^ "Machine: Mullard TEA1002 PAL colour encoder (tea1002)". Vas the Man’s Arcade.
  3. ^ Graham, Adrian. "AlphaTantel Viewdata Terminal". Binary Dinosaurs. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  4. ^ Graham, Adrian. "AlphaTantel Viewdata Terminal Motherboard". Binary Dinosaurs.
  5. ^ "Machine: AlphaTantel (alphatan)". Vas the Man’s Arcade.
  6. ^ Microvector 256 Operating Manual (PDF). Climax Computers. 1983.
  7. ^ Jenkins, Tony (June 1984). "TV Test Pattern Generator" (PDF). Television. p. 436.
  8. ^ "TEA1002 PAL COLOUR ENCODER AND VIDEO SUMMER". Fabian Enterprises. 2013.
  9. ^ a b c d TEA1002 PAL Colour Encoder and Video Summer. Mullard. 1982. p. 6.