Electrical – simple composite video circuits

analog

I am having a really hard time finding anything on the internet involving DIY composite video.

I can find multitudes of "Adapter" projects like VGA to Composite, S-video to composite ect… but no "how to generate a simple analog video waveform that my tv can understand."

I want to eventually design a circuit that amplifies guitar input and "converts" it into a analog video signal.

I feel like this could be an interesting project that could help others understand how signals work. I first need to learn how composite video works and I need somewhere to start, Any thoughts?

Thank you.

Best Answer

An analog video signal is a very complex waveform. Getting any sensible video display based on a guitar's audio signal would be very difficult.

Look on Wikipedia for "Analog Television" for a description of the signal format.

A video image is drawn on the screen line-by-line. In North America, there are 525 horizontal line to make up an image (but some are hidden in the vertical retrace period). The horizontal scan rate is 15,734 Hz, with a vertical scan rate of 59.94 Hz (NTSC colour)(if I remember the numbers correctly). Odd lines of the image are displayed on one vertical scan, and even lines on the next.