Difference between revisions of "SegaPCM"

From Sega Retro

m
Line 1: Line 1:
{{sub-stub}}
+
{{cleanup}}
 +
{{ICBob
 +
| image=
 +
| title=
 +
| designer=
 +
| date=
 +
}}
 
'''SegaPCM''' is the colloquial name of a PCM audio chip used by [[Sega]] in a number of arcade boards used by [[AM2]] between 1985 and 1991. The chip's part number varies; see below. The manufacturer is unknown.
 
'''SegaPCM''' is the colloquial name of a PCM audio chip used by [[Sega]] in a number of arcade boards used by [[AM2]] between 1985 and 1991. The chip's part number varies; see below. The manufacturer is unknown.
  
Line 16: Line 22:
 
**All games: 315-5218 (unconfirmed)
 
**All games: 315-5218 (unconfirmed)
  
[[Category:Sound Hardware]]
+
==References==
 +
<references />

Revision as of 11:44, 19 October 2017

Cleanup.svg
This article needs cleanup.
This article needs to be edited to conform to a higher standard of article quality. After the article has been cleaned up, you may remove this message. For help, see the How to Edit a Page article.
Notavailable.svg
SegaPCM

SegaPCM is the colloquial name of a PCM audio chip used by Sega in a number of arcade boards used by AM2 between 1985 and 1991. The chip's part number varies; see below. The manufacturer is unknown.

The chip is an 16-channel stereo digital mixing chip that uses external sample ROM. The chip is not pure stereo; it simply duplicates its input data on both left and right channels, allowing you to set the two channel volumes independnetly of each other to simulate panning. Samples play at a fixed frequency and can be looped. It presumably allows up to 16MB of sample ROM provided by the board but has additional banking hardware with a six bit bank number leading to a total of up to 1GB of addressable sample data (assuming optimal conditions). The sample format is some 8-bit PCM (what form it is is not yet determined by anyone here). Whether or not it produces an analog or digital signal is also undetermined by editors here. Samples must be aligned to some offset (TODO determine).

Rather than using this chip, Sega decided to use a simple DAC for its main arcade board at the time, the Sega System 16 board, for playing back samples, and continued to use a simple DAC in the System 24 before switching to chips by other vendors later.

Arcade Boards with SegaPCM and Part Numbers

References