ADV7125
Production
The ADV7125 (ADV®) is a triple high speed, digital-to-analog
converter (DAC) on a single monolithic chip. It consists of three
high speed, 8-bit video...
Datasheet
ADV7125 on Analog.com
AD724
Production
The AD724 is a low cost RGB to NTSC/PAL Encoder that converts red, green and blue color component signals into their corresponding luminance (baseband...
Datasheet
AD724 on Analog.com
ADV7120
Not Recommended for New Designs
The ADV7120 (ADV®) is a digital video converter on a single monolithic chip. The part is specifically designed for high resolution color graphics and video...
Datasheet
ADV7120 on Analog.com
We want to implement a system with PAL video output or VGA monitor.
1. For a PAL solution we want to use the ADV7125 for digital to analog conversion and the AD724 for analog to composite video. We saw in the datasheet of the AD724 (page 11) that it may be possible to use this solution because there is an example circuit using the ADV7120 (similar part to the ADV7125).
Our question is about the voltage level of the green output of the ADV7125.
In the datasheet of the ADV7125 you can see that BLANK level of the green output is around 0.2V and WHITE level is around 0.9V (page 11). The AD724 only supports the standard 0V for BLANK and 0.7V for WHITE. Can we use ADV7125 in conjunction with the AD724 although the level is not correct? What will the consequences be? Are there any workarounds?
We don’t understand how it is possible to use the ADV7120, for example, with this level of voltage.
2. For the same reason for VGA, can we use ADV7125 to generate the green color although the level is not the standard also?
What will the consequences be?