The A+ Certification & PC Repair Handbook (Charles River Media Networking/Security)
All computer monitors have at least one thing in common: they all connect to a female DB 15-pin port on the back of a computer system. (Figure 21.1 shows a standard female DB 15-pin video port on the back of a system unit.) The DB 15-pin port may be attached directly to the motherboard, or it may be located on a video expansion card.
The female DB 15-pin port has three rows of five pinholes that accept a male DB 15-pin connector, which is attached to the end of the monitor’s cable. Each of the 15 pins on the monitor’s DB-15 connector has a different pin assignment that carries out a specified video function related to power, color, or refresh rate. Many monitor-related problems can occur if one of these pins gets bent or broken. It is very important to take great care when connecting a DB 15-pin connector to a DB 15-pin port on the back of your system. Table 21.1 displays the functionality of each of the 15 pins on a DB 15-pin video connector.
Pin Number | Video Function |
1 | Red video |
2 | Green video |
3 | Blue video |
4 | Monitor identification 2 |
5 | Ground pin/unused |
6 | Red video return |
7 | Green video return |
8 | Blue video return |
9 | Unused |
10 | Ground |
11 | Monitor identification 0 |
12 | Monitor identification 1 |
13 | Horizontal synchronization |
14 | Vertical synchronization |
15 | Unused |
The A+ Core exam is likely to present you with a question or diagram that tests your knowledge of the difference between a DB 15-pin video connector and a game/MIDI port, otherwise known as a joystick/MIDI port on a sound card. (See Figure 21.1 for the location of a game/MIDI port on a system unit.)
Note | Remember for the exam that a female DB 15-pin video port has three rows of five pinholes. A joystick/MIDI port on a sound card has two rows of pinholes: one row of eight pinholes and one row of seven pinholes. |
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