ICD-1500-Adapter-Boards
© SightLine Applications, Inc.
10
Table 5: 1500-HDMI Connector Summary
Label
MFG Part Number
Function
Mates with:
J1
3-Pin Molex 53047-0310
Serial port 1
Molex 051021-0300 / SLA-CAB-0303
J2
10029449-001RLF
HDMI receptacle (TYPE A)
HDMI plug (TYPE A)
J3
2-Pin Molex 53047-0210
GPIO connector
Molex 051021-0200 / SLA-CAB-0202
J4
DF12B-50DS-0.5V(86)
Digital Video Connector
SLA-1500-OEM J4 DF12B-50DP-0.5V(86)
J5
5-Pin Molex 53261-0571
I2C connector
Molex 051021-0500 / SLA-CAB-0502
Table 6: 1500-HDMI Connector Descriptions
Connector
Description
Connector J1: Serial Port 1 Connector
This port uses the standard pinout defined in
Appendix - Standard Connector #1
Connector J2: HDMI
This port uses the standard pinout defined in
Appendix - Standard Connector #6
Connector J3: GPIO Port
This port uses the standard pinout defined in
Appendix - Standard Connector #4
Connector J4: Digital Video Connector
This port uses the standard pinout defined in
Appendix - Standard Connector #3
Connector J5: I2C Port
This port uses the standard pinout defined in
Appendix - Standard Connector #2
7.1
Hardware Setup
EAN-Digital Video Configuration
documents for setup and configuration
information.
1500-HDMI converts HDMI camera signals to parallel digital video that can be acquired by the 1500-
OEM board.
The 1500-OEM board must be configured to accept the converted parallel digital video signal. This
configuration will be used to set the HDMI camera format.
Configuration uses the generic digital setup to specify the timing parameters of parallel digital camera
input data. See the associated documents for more details.
Pixel Clock rates are limited to 74.25MHz by the 1500-OEM hardware. This limits the maximum input
formats of 1080P30 and 720P60. Image processing limits frame rate to 30 Hz. 720P60 format video can
be supported by using the Skip Frames feature. 1080P60 video cannot be acquired as the pixel clock
rate is above 74.25MHz.
The HDMI board will send EDID data to the attached camera with the desired format, e.g., 720P30. The
camera can still send whatever format data it chooses.
The GoPro and other cameras generally ignore the frame rate portion of the request (P30) and
generate (P60) video. This is acceptable for 720P modes, but 1080P60 cannot be acquired. For this
reason, an HDMI camera should be used that only supports 1080P30.