Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6266099
-
Patent Number
6,266,099
-
Date Filed
Tuesday, August 4, 199826 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, July 24, 200123 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
- Skjerven Morrill MacPherson LLP
- Kwok, Esq.; Edward C.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 348 569
- 348 707
- 348 570
- 348 563
- 348 725
- 330 284
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
A video pre-amplifier includes an input stage and an output stage. In one embodiment, an on-screen display signal is provided to the output stage, and a control signal is asserted when the on-screen display signal is active. With respect to a video output signal, both the gains of the input stage and output stage are adjusted when the control signal is asserted. In one embodiment, the control signal is generated by a comparator within the output stage.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an amplifier circuit for video display. In particular, the present invention relates to an amplifier circuit for providing on screen a signal for a second image overlaying the video image.
2. Background of the Invention
On-screen Display (OSD) is a technique by which a signal for a second image is substituted for a video signal, so as to overlay the second image over the original video image. To provide the OSD image, the OSD signal is typically injected into an amplifier circuit for the video signal while, simultaneously, the video input signal to the amplifier circuit is attenuated or “blanked”. To prevent the video image from showing through the OSD image, while the OSD signal is active, coupling of the video signal to the amplifier's output signal by feed through and crosstalk must be suppressed.
In the prior art, to suppress feed through and crosstalk, a complex electronic circuit which requires a large silicon area is used. Alternatively, a dedicated pin in a video driver circuit is provided for receiving a control signal which directs whether video or OSD signal is output from the video driver circuit. These methods are unsatisfactory because of the requirements of a larger die and a dedicated pin. In addition, these methods tend to degrade bandwidth, and are particularly to difficult to implment with an 8-volt power supply.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides, in a video amplifier circuit, an efficient on-screen display capability, which can be implemented with very few components (hence, without occupying a large silicon area), without affecting bandwidth of the video amplifier, and without affecting the switching times between an on-screen image and a video image. The present invention avoids feed through and cross-talk of the video signal into the on-screen display image by adjusting the gains of both stages of a 2-stage video amplifier.
In one embodiment, the video amplifier includes: (a) an input stage receiving a video signal and providing on an output terminal an amplified video signal; (b) an output stage, receiving the amplified video signal and an on-screen display signal, and providing (i) an output video signal at an output terminal, based on the amplified video signal, when the on-screen display signal is inactive, (ii) an output on-screen display signal, when the on-screen display signal is active, and (iii) a control signal indicating whether or not the on-screen display signal is active; and (c) an attenuation circuit receiving the control signal. The attenuation circuit of that embodiment attenuates the amplified video signal of the input stage, when the control signal indicates that the on-screen display signal is active.
In one embodiment, the attenuation circuit of the video amplifier circuit includes a transistor having an output terminal coupled to the output terminal of the input stage, and a gate terminal coupled to receive the control signal. The control signal can be generated in the output stage by a comparator coupled to receive the on-screen display signal and a reference voltage. In one embodiment, the amplified video signal of the input stage of the video amplifier is adjusted by a drive control signal and a contrast control signal.
According to another aspect of the present invention, the output stage of the video amplifier also includes an attenuation circuit which attenuates the output video signal of the output stage, when the on-screen display signal is active.
The present invention is better understood upon consideration of the detailed description below and the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
shows an input stage
100
and an attenuation circuit
150
provided in a video pre-amplifier circuit, in accordance with one embodiment of the present invention.
FIG. 2
shows an output stage
200
of the video pre-amplifier circuit of FIG.
1
.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
One embodiment of the present invention is provided in an improvement of a video amplifier circuit disclosed in the copending U.S. patent applications (“Copending Applications”): (a) “High Speed Video Mixer Circuit,” by Ronald Page, Ser. No. 09/129,255, filed on or about the same day as the present application, and (b) “Architecture for a Video Preamplifier with an On-screen Display,” Ser. No. 09/128,734, filed on or about the same day as the present application. Both Copending Applications are assigned to National Semiconductor Corporation, which is also the Assignee of the present invention. The disclosures of the Copending Applications are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
To simplify the detailed description below, like elements in the various figures are provided like reference numerals.
FIG. 1
shows an input stage
100
and an attenuation circuit
150
provided in one channel of a video pre-amplifier circuit, in accordance with one embodiment of the present invention. Typically, there are three substantially identical channels in a video amplifier circuit to provide output signals for each of the colors red, blue and green, respectively. As shown in
FIG. 1
, an input video signal is AC-coupled at an input terminal
127
, which is a base terminal of a transistor
110
in input stage
100
. Input terminal
127
is biased by a reference voltage generated by resistors
105
,
106
,
109
and
108
, diodes
101
-
104
, and NPN transistor
107
. The video signal at input terminal
127
, which modulates the collector current of NPN transistor
110
, is converted into a voltage signal of a suitable DC bias by resistors
111
and
128
at the base terminal of NPN transistor
112
. The voltage signal is then amplified by the action of NPN transistor
112
and resistors
113
,
125
and
126
to provide an output signal at terminal
118
, with adjustments by the two differential input signals V
contrast
and V
drive
received, respectively, across base terminals
129
a
and
129
b
of NPN transistors
114
and
115
, and across base terminals
130
a
and
130
b
of NPN transistors
116
and
117
. The differential input signal V
drive
at base terminals
130
a
and
130
b
is referred to as the “drive control” signal, and the differential input signal V
contrast
across base terminals
129
a
and
129
b
is referred to as the “contrast control” signal. When video data is active (i.e., in the absence of an on-screen display, discussed below), the gain G
100A
of the input stage
100
is proportional to voltages V
drive
and V
contrast
, and the resistances R
1a
, R
1b
, and R
2
of resistors
125
,
126
and
113
respectively:
G
100A
=kV
drive
V
contrast
(
R
1b
)/
R
2
FIG. 1
provides exemplary resistance values 500 ohms, 1500 ohms and 2 Kohms for resistors
125
,
126
and
113
respectively. The output video signal at terminal
118
is provided to an output stage
200
, which is illustrated in FIG.
2
. As shown in
FIG. 2
, the output video signal at terminal
118
is further amplified by the action of NPN transistor
201
and resistors
203
and
204
to provide an amplified output signal
202
. When the video signal is active, the gain G
200A
of output stage
200
is provided by the ratio of the resistances R
203
and R
204
of resistors
203
and
204
:
G
200A
=R
203
/R
204
FIG. 2
provides exemplary values of 3 Kohms and 300 ohms for resistors
203
and
204
respectively, resulting in a gain G
200A
of 10, or 20 dB. Thus, when video signal is active, the combined gain G
A
of input stage
100
and output stage
200
is given by:
G
A
=G
200A
*G
100A
When an on-screen display (OSD) is active, an OSD signal is coupled into output stage
200
at base terminal
245
of PNP transistor
234
. When OSD signal is off, PNP transistor
234
acts as a level shifter, so that resistor
246
pulls the voltage V
236
at terminal
236
from ground voltage to 0.7 volts. (In this embodiment, the supply voltage is at 8 volts). When OSD signal is on, voltage V
236
is at 2.7 volts. The 2.7 volts is provided by a voltage clamp including the voltage divider formed by resistors
242
,
243
and
244
, and transmitted through NPN transistor
256
, resistor
239
and PNP transistor
235
. AS shown in
FIG. 2
, in this example, resistors
242
,
243
and
244
are provided resistances 4 Kohms, 1.4 Kohms and 10.6 Kohms, respectively. Resistors
242
,
243
and
244
also provide a reference voltage V
247
at terminal
247
. In this instance V
247
is approximately 2 volts.
The voltage V
236
at terminal
236
is compared with the reference voltage V
247
at terminal
247
by comparator
260
formed by NPN transistors
233
and
241
, and resistors
240
,
232
,
231
,
237
and
238
. When voltage V
236
is at 2.7 volts, comparator
260
provides an output OSD voltage at terminal
248
. This output OSD voltage is mixed with the output video voltage of terminal
202
at a later stage (not shown) to drive a video display. In this embodiment, the resistances of resistors
240
,
232
,
231
,
237
and
238
are provided as 2 Kohms, 3 Kohms, 2 Kohms, 5.9 Kohms, and 3 Kohms, respectively. When the OSD signal is active, since voltage V
236
is clamped to 2.7 volts, the voltage at the emitter terminal of NPN transistor
233
is approximately 2.0 volts. As a result, the current in resistor
240
is approximately 1 mA, and the voltage at terminal
122
, common to resistors
231
and
232
, drops from the supply voltage (i.e., 8 volts) to approximately 6 volts. This voltage at terminal
122
is provided as a control signal to attenuation circuit
150
of FIG.
1
.
When the OSD signal is active, comparator
260
also turns on PNP transistor
207
through the action of NPN transistors
208
and
230
and diode
209
. PNP transistor
207
, in turn, turns on PNP transistor
206
by pulling node
251
towards the ground reference, so as to “blank” the output video signal at terminal
202
. Resistor
249
is shared by all 3 color channels, so that an active OSD signal in any one of the 3 color channels would blank the output video signal of all 3 color channels. A current mirror formed by resistor
252
and NPN transistor
205
provided a reference voltage V
ref
at terminal
131
. Voltage V
ref
is also provided as a reference voltage to attenuation circuit
150
of FIG.
1
.
When the OSD signal is active, the gain of output stage
200
is reduced because of the low on-impedance X
206
of transistor
206
. The gain G
200D
of output stage
200
is given by:
G
200D
=(
R
203
||X
206
)/
R
204
Without attenuation circuit
150
, the video signal at input terminal
118
can still feed through to output terminal
202
, even when transistor
206
is turned on. Further reduction of the impedance X
206
of PNP transistor
206
can be achieved by, for example, increasing the size (hence, the current) of transistor
206
. However, increasing the current in transistor
206
also increases the switching time of transistor
206
from OSD active to video active conditions. The increased switching time may result in creating a black right edge to an OSD image and may reduce the bandwidth of the video pre-amplifier. Attenuation circuit
150
obviates the need for further increasing the size of transistor
206
.
Referring back to
FIG. 1
, terminal
122
is coupled to the base terminal of NPN transistor
121
so that, when the OSD signal is active, the voltage at the emitter terminal
153
drops from approximately 7.3 volts to 5.3 volts. (The reference voltage at terminal
131
ensures that NPN transistors
121
and
132
are always on) Consequently, PNP transistor
120
turns on by the voltage on terminal
124
, which is common to emitter terminal of transistor
121
and the collector terminal of transistor
132
, when the OSD signal is active, thereby pulling emitter terminal
133
of PNP transistor
120
towards the ground reference, and turning on PNP transistor
119
. Terminal
133
is pulled to the supply voltage by resistor
123
, when the OSD signal is inactive. PNP transistor
119
pulls the output terminal
118
of input stage
100
towards ground reference. Consequently, the lower on-impedance X
119
of PNP transistor
119
reduces the gain G
100D
of input stage
100
. Gain G
100D
is given by:
G
100D
=kV
drive
V
contrast
(
R
1b
||X
119
)/
R
2
The combined gain of input stage
100
and output stage
200
is thus given by:
G
D
=G
100D
*G
100D
Since the “OSD signal active” gains G
100D
and G
200D
are substantially smaller than the corresponding “video signal active gains” G
100A
and G
200A
, respectively, effective blanking of video signal is achieved. A simulation of the attenuation of video signal at terminal
202
shows that, without attenuation circuit
150
, the video signal at terminal
202
is attenuated by −31 dB, when the OSD image is white, and attenuated by −14 dB, when the OSD image is black. With attenuation circuit
150
, the video signal at terminal
202
is attenuated by −44 dB, when the OSD image is white, and attenuated by −42 dB, when the OSD image is black. Thus, significant improvement in video signal attenuation during an active OSD signal is demonstrated. It is also shown that the effect of attenuation circuit
150
on the rise and fall times of the video signal, when switching between a video active condition to an OSD active condition, is negligible.
The above detailed description is provided to illustrate specific embodiments of the present invention and is not intended to be limiting. Numerous variations and modifications within the scope of the present invention is possible. The present invention is set forth in the following claims.
Claims
- 1. A video amplifier circuit with on-screen display, comprising:an input stage receiving a video signal, and providing on an output terminal an amplified video signal; an output stage receiving said amplified video signal and an on-screen display signal, said output stage providing (a) an output video signal at an output terminal, based on said amplified video signal, when said on-screen display signal is inactive, (b) an output on-screen display signal, when said on-screen display signal is active, and (c) a control signal indicating whether or not said on-screen display signal is active; and an attenuation circuit receiving said control signal, said attenuation circuit attenuating said amplified video signal, when said control signal indicates that said on-screen display signal is active.
- 2. A video amplifier circuit as in claim 1, wherein said attenuation circuit comprises a transistor having an output terminal coupled to said output terminal of said input stage, and a gate terminal coupled to receive said control signal.
- 3. A video amplifier circuit as in claim 1, wherein said control signal is generated in said output stage by a comparator coupled to receive said on-screen display signal and a reference voltage.
- 4. A video amplifier circuit as in claim 1, wherein the gain of said input stage is adjusted by a drive control signal.
- 5. A video amplifier circuit as in claim 1, wherein the gain of said input stage is adjusted by a contrast control signal.
- 6. A video amplifier circuit as in claim 1, further comprising a second attenuation circuit, said second attenuation circuit attenuating said output video signal of said output stage, when said on-screen display signal is active.
- 7. A video amplifier circuit as in claim 6, further comprising:a comparator coupled to receive said on-screen display signal and a reference voltage to provide said control signal; and a transistor having an output terminal coupled to said output terminal of said output stage and a gate terminal coupled to receive said control signal.
- 8. A method for providing an on-screen display, comprising:in an input stage, receiving a video signal, and providing, on an output terminal of said input stage, an amplified video signal; in an output stage, receiving said amplified video signal and an on-screen display signal, and providing (a) based on said amplified video signal, an output video signal at an output terminal, when said on-screen display signal is inactive, (b) an output on-screen display signal, when said on-screen display signal is active, and (c) a control signal indicating whether or not said on-screen display signal is active; and in an attenuation circuit, receiving said control signal and attenuating said amplified video signal, when said control signal indicates that said on-screen display signal is active.
- 9. A method as in claim 8, wherein said attenuating is achieved by providing a transistor having an output terminal coupled to said output terminal of said input stage, and a gate terminal coupled to receive said control signal.
- 10. A method as in claim 8, wherein said control signal is generated in said output stage by a comparator coupled to receive said on-screen display signal and a reference voltage.
- 11. A method as in claim 8, further comprising adjusting the gain of said input stage by a drive control signal.
- 12. A method as in claim 8, further comprising adjusting the gain of said input stage by a contrast control signal.
- 13. A method as in claim 8, further comprising attenuating said output video signal of said output stage, when said on-screen display signal is active.
- 14. A method as in claim 13, further comprising:coupling said on-screen display signal and a reference voltage to a comparator to provide said control signal; and providing a transistor having an output terminal coupled to said output terminal of said output stage and a gate terminal coupled to receive said control signal.
US Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
4795949 |
Wilber |
Jan 1989 |
|
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number |
Date |
Country |
11-103398 |
Apr 1999 |
JP |
11-272255 |
Oct 1999 |
JP |