Teach Time Encyclopedia - Learn About Our World
Home Page
Teach Time
Featured Topics

United States
by state

CITYology

Academic Disciplines

Historical Timelines

Themed Timelines

Calendars

Reference Tables

Biographies

How-tos



Tuesday, October 07, 2008

SCART

SCART (from Syndicat des Constructeurs d'Appareils Radiorécepteurs et Téléviseurs) is a standard for connecting audio and video equipment. Also called Peritel and Euroconnector.

The SCART connector was developed by the French. Its original purpose was to prevent foreign television imports. Previously France had legislation which prevented all imported televisions, if they didn't support the old French 819 line monochrome system. One could understand that this effectively stopped any foreign televisions being imported, but when the 819 line system disappeared this was no longer a valid reason for banning imports. Therefore they introduced the SCART socket to try and maintain their private television market, the newly passed legislation requiring every TV sold in France since 1980 to have a SCART socket. This was of course much less of a deterrent, as it was much easier for manufacturers to add a SCART socket to their televisions than to produce dual-standard sets, and the SCART was actually useful elsewhere with the development of cheap home video recorders.

Before SCART, many video and audio devices provided lots of different sockets for AV signals. Devices made by different companies could have different and incompatible standards.

SCART attempts to make connecting such devices together much simpler, by providing one plug that contains all the necessary signals, and is standard across different manufacturers. SCART makes connecting such devices very simple, because one cable can connect any two SCART-compatible devices, and the connector is designed so that you cannot insert it incorrectly.

Pin-out:

+------------------------------------------+
| 1   3   5   7   9   11  13  15  17  19   | 21
|                                          \\
|   2   4   6   8   10  12  14  16  18  20  \\
+--------------------------------------------+

AUDIO Output Right
  • AUDIO Input Right
  • AUDIO Output Left
  • AUDIO Ground
  • BLUE Ground
  • AUDIO Input Left
  • BLUE
  • Function Switching
  • GREEN Ground
  • D²B Input
  • GREEN
  • D²B Output
  • RED/Chroma Ground
  • D²B Ground
  • RED/Chroma
  • Blanking
  • VIDEO/Sync/Luminance Ground
  • Blanking Ground
  • VIDEO/Sync/Luminance Output
  • VIDEO/Sync/Luminance Input
  • Common Ground (metal shield)

  • Pin 8 is a signal from the source that indicates the type of video present.
    0V means no signal, or internal bypass
    +6V means a widescreen (16:9) signal
    +12V means a normal (4:3) signal

    D²B (Digital Data Bus) is an IEC standard for a serial communication bus. It is a multi-master bus for home automation, and was originally developed by Philips in the 1970s.

    See also

    External links



    Internet Hotel Solutions

    Site Sponsors
    AC Units
    Baltimore Harbor
    Boot Camp Grads
    Bra Size
    Burkittsville
    College Hotels
    Digital Harbor
    Free Cell Phones
    Golden Hare Travel
    Golf Vacations
    Golf Courses
    Gourmet
    Hair Styles
    Hippodrome
    iWoman
    Lesson Plans
    Maryland Hotels
    MD Genealogy
    Minor League Stuff
    Motel Site
    Ocean City
    OC Real Estate
    Old Agers
    Office Supplies
    Orlando
    Pet Friendly Hotel
    Room Prices
    Savannah, GA
    Ski Vacations
    South Baltimore
    Student Teaching
    Travel Sources
    University Hotels
    Visit Military Bases
    Washington, DC

    Brought to you by NoChildLeftBehind.com and the Beaches and Towns Network, LLC.