139 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
139 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
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The SSAVI Cable Scrambling System by Mad Phone-man
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Short of the D.E.S. based Video Cypher system, one of the most sophisticated
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and versitile video/audio scrambling systems is the S.S.A.V.I. system. The
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acronym is the "Suppressed Sync Active Video Inversion". Zenith has exploited
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this system for years and later enhanced versions, known as Z-Tac and A-Tac
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have SSAVI at their roots.
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SSAVI was sucessfully marketed to numerous over-the-air subscription services,
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most of which are defunct now. In the wake of these services, however are
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thousands of SSAVI decoder units being sold by a variety of companies and
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individuals for use on CATV systems.
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There is an inherent problem in this re-marketing of STV units in that the
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Zenith tuner has been stripped of its VHF capability. The STV services were
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UHF systems. The STV SSAVI units, therefore, had no need for VHF tuning
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capabilitys.
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There are, on the other hand, SSAVI units whose initial purpose was CATV based
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and which do have VHF tuning capability. The average consumer, however is hard
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pressed to know just what he might receive when ordering a SSAVI unit.
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companies employ a variety of techniques to modify the STV (UHF) units for VHF
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reception. There are also numerous revisions of the SSAVI units, all from
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Zenith, that date back to the pre-VLSI era. Most units which the author has
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dealt with do employ VLSI technology and therefore are minus an entire PCB
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which earlier models had mounted in their top shells and accomidated discreet
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circutry, later replaced by a single VLSI device (GATEARRAY).
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The old discreet versions are the most versitile in terms of modifying, but
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least available in numbers. Schematic diagrams for the discreet SSAVI devices
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are available from Shojiki Electronics, (716) 284-2163
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This article, therefore will deal with the SSAVI units at a more superficial
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level. There are 4-modes of operation obtained from 3 variables available to
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the SSAVI operator. These variables are:
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1) Normal/ Suppressed sync
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2) Normal/ Inverted video
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3) Normal/ Suppressed audio
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The 4 video modes of operation thus yield:
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1) Normal video/ Normal sync
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2) Normal video/ suppressed sync
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3) Inverted video/ Normal sync
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4) Inverted video/ suppressed sync
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The first of these modes is "clear" transmission or "non-scrambled". The
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remaining three are designed to foil reception by standard TV receivers. In the
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case of mode 2, thw sync pulses are offset from their normal "Blacker-than
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black" position such that the front and back porch of the sync pedistal are at
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+80 IRE units. This action prevents the sync-seperator in a standard TV from
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stripping off the sync pulses. The result is that horizontal sync is lost and
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the picture tends to "tear" or roll horizontaly. In addition, the AGC circutry
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is confused and tends to DC clamp the blackest portion of the video to the
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sync level.
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The level used in maximum security is mode 4. In this mode, the video is
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inverted between each horizontal sync pulse from line 25 to line 260 of the
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active scan lines. The sync pulses are suppressed as described earlier, but
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NOT inverted. This is a clever technique to foil pirate decoders. This is
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because if one simply inverts the composite video, one also inverts the sync
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pedestal, thus inverting the chroma burst on the sync back porch. Thus the
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video chroma (color) will be incorrect. The successful decoder must, therefore
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invert the video ONLY between horizontal sync pulses, and provide an offset
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pulse gated to shift the sync pulses back to their normal level.
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To further compicate matters, modes 1-4 may be switched between at random,
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under command of the head end, to foil simple static decoders which cannot
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automaticly track these mode switches.
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Audio in the SSAVI system may also be displaced, preventing reception on a
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standard TV receiver. It, when desired can be shifted, SCA style, to a
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subcarrier. One can see that the SSAVI system provides a fairly high degree
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of security.
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The availability of SSAVI units and their employment by unauthorized persons
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caused some inital grief for CATV operators. To render the SSAVI units non-
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usable, Zenith changed the video inversion key employed by the CATV-SSAVI units
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to differ from the STV SSAVI units.
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The SSAVI units key on the binary level transmitted during the second half of
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line 20 during the vertical blanking interval. When this level is high, the
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comming frame is to be inverted. When this level is low, the comming frame is
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to be normal (non-inverted).
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SSAVI cable systems, therefore, employ a couple of techniques to foil STV units
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which are keying on line 20. One technique involvs maintaining the video in the
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inverted state, but transmitting a "bogus" line 20 ke to cause the STV SSAVI
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units to switch states at a random, frequent rate. This results in "flashing".
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The picture switches between normal and inverted at a high rate producing an
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annoying FLASH syndrome.
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Another technique used by CATV-SSAVI systems is to transmit the bogus line 20
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signal as described, but to transmit the key on line 21 which then allows the
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video to become dynamically switched from normal to inverted once again.
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Shojiki sells a manual on a circut called Z-trap. This circut foils the first
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of these techniques by returning control of the line 20 key to the user. The
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circut provides the user with a switch which selects between high and low for
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insertion during line 20. The circut stops the flashing.
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The more state-of-the-art systems like Z-tac use a still different inversion
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key. The sync suppression technique is never-the-less, identical to the SSAVI
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system.
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It is an easy mater enough to use a STV-SSAVI unit for CATV reception. One
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need only to employ a "block converter" ahead of the SSAVI unit. The STV-SSAVI
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units can be tuned through the upper 2/3 of the UHF spectrum by means of a
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multi-turn pot inside the unit. The block converter will up-convert CATV
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frequencys into this same band of freqs. The block converters are available
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from Radio Shack and the likes.
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The limitation in the block converter technique is that hyper-band and a large
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portion of the super-band signals fall above UHF channel 83 and above the
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SSAVI's tuning range. For systems where all premium channels are in the
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mid-band, however, this technique works well.
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If one has need of access to super/hyper band channels a converter-to-block
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converter to SSAVI hook-up works equaly well with an important caveat. The
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converter must NOT re-modulate the video. Converters which provide mute/volume
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control capability are therefore not acceptable. The reason for this follows.
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The hook-up then, looks like this:
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CATV-> Converter -->ch 3 --> Block conv --> ch 34-36 -->SSVI -->ch 3 --> TV
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down out up tunable
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The SSAVI decoder relies on a 504khz syncronizing signal derived from the
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carrier itself. Therefore, down converters which re-modulate destroy this
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reference and cause the SSAVI to malfunction. Simple hetrodyning down-
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converters allow the SSAVI unit access to the actual carrier of the
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transmitted video.
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To circumvent all these frequency conversions, many resellers install small
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VHF tuners into the SSAVI units. Depending on the quality of the tuner, the
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reception may be better or worse than the multi-conversion system.
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SSAVI units may also be modified to "skew" their internal timing so as to key
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off of line 21 so as to be compatable with systems whose real inversion key
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resides on line 21 as described earlier. The older discreet IC SSAVI units lend
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themselves to this most readily. The VLSI equipped units, never the less can
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also be modified to be one scan line shifted, by interuption of the 504khz
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reference for 32 cycles.[0m
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