From e6c217a117d3d84b40284dd57c345901818b7988 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Pedro Date: Fri, 19 Feb 2021 10:56:23 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Update DS-TV-OUT.md --- DS-TV-OUT.md | 7 ------- 1 file changed, 7 deletions(-) diff --git a/DS-TV-OUT.md b/DS-TV-OUT.md index b6931fc..d6c0300 100644 --- a/DS-TV-OUT.md +++ b/DS-TV-OUT.md @@ -12,19 +12,12 @@ The retail firmware of the Nintendo DS Lite (not the BIOS) disables this specifi This feature is only found on the Nintendo DS Lite. Nintendo DS Phat does not contain this feature nor does the Nintendo DSi. It is important to remark that **this is not the same hardware** found on Devkits or other special units. This hardware feature is present in virtually **every single Nintendo DS Lite** out there. The reason why it was left there is unknown, but as said before, it is not related to development units, those use a different video capture hardware. Maybe Nintendo imagined the Nintendo Switch as early as 2006? - - ![First iteration of the TV-OUT board](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LostNintendoHistory/lostnintendohistory.github.io/main/img/NDSTVOUT/PCB_Rev_11.png) - - We only need a few extra hardware components to make this video signal usable. You will be able to download the schematics and gerber files for our open hardware circuit board [from the repository](https://github.com/LostNintendoHistory/Lost-NDS-TV). NOTE: Currently working on revision 1.2 to fix some minor issues. - - ![First prototype and tests before designing a proper board](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LostNintendoHistory/lostnintendohistory.github.io/main/img/NDSTVOUT/Prototype.jpg)
First prototype and tests before designing a proper board -
The final, production-ready board contains a DAC (Digital to Analogue Converter) which turns the 10 bits digital signal at 16.7 MHz provided by the DS Lite into a proper analogue signal. This signal then goes through an amplifier and it's ready to be delivered to your nearest TV trough composite video.