Difference between revisions of "SegaPCM"

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The technology is a 16-channel PCM sample mixer that uses an external sample ROM. While the mixer is stereo, only the volume of the left and right channels are independently controllable. 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 6-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).
 
The technology is a 16-channel PCM sample mixer that uses an external sample ROM. While the mixer is stereo, only the volume of the left and right channels are independently controllable. 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 6-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).
  
SegaPCM was used exclusively by Studio 128's games through the [[System 32]]; other Sega arcade games (even those with music by the same composers), if they used sampled audio at all, provided a very basic [[DAC]]. Near the end of the decade the basic DAC would give way to more elaborate chips by other vendors (such as the [[NEC uPD7759]] and [[Ricoh RF5C68]]). SegaPCM itself would eventually be phased out by the time Studio 128 became [[AM2]], replaced by the [[Yamaha YMW258-F]] (aka "Sega MultiPCM"), beginning with the [[System Multi 32]] arcade board.
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SegaPCM was used exclusively by Studio 128's games through the [[System 32]]; other Sega arcade games (even those with music by the same composers), if they used sampled audio at all, provided a very basic [[DAC]]. Near the end of the decade the basic DAC would give way to more elaborate chips by other vendors (such as the [[NEC uPD7759]] and [[Ricoh RF5C68]]). SegaPCM itself would eventually be phased out by the time Studio 128 became [[AM2]], replaced by the [[Yamaha YMW258-F]], under the "Sega MultiPCM" label, beginning with the [[System Multi 32]] arcade board.
  
 
==Arcade boards with SegaPCM and part numbers==
 
==Arcade boards with SegaPCM and part numbers==

Revision as of 14:44, 23 September 2023

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315-5218.jpg
SegaPCM

SegaPCM is the colloquial name of a PCM playback technology created by engineers at Studio 128 in 1985. It was originally implemented as discrete logic chips before being consolidated into a series of custom ASICs. It was mainly used in the Super Scaler series of high-end Sega arcade systems.

The technology is a 16-channel PCM sample mixer that uses an external sample ROM. While the mixer is stereo, only the volume of the left and right channels are independently controllable. 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 6-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).

SegaPCM was used exclusively by Studio 128's games through the System 32; other Sega arcade games (even those with music by the same composers), if they used sampled audio at all, provided a very basic DAC. Near the end of the decade the basic DAC would give way to more elaborate chips by other vendors (such as the NEC uPD7759 and Ricoh RF5C68). SegaPCM itself would eventually be phased out by the time Studio 128 became AM2, replaced by the Yamaha YMW258-F, under the "Sega MultiPCM" label, beginning with the System Multi 32 arcade board.

Arcade boards with SegaPCM and part numbers

  • All games: 315-5218[1]
  • All games: 315-5218 (unconfirmed)
  • All games: 315-5218 (unconfirmed)

Technical specifications

The SegaPCM has the following technical specifications:[2][1]

References