IBM Enhanced Graphics Adapter

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Screenshot from the EGA game Darnit, which uses the 640×350 graphics mode. The screenshot contains 14 colors, of which 5 are not in the CGA 16-color palette.
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Screenshot from the EGA game Darnit, which uses the 640×350 graphics mode. The screenshot contains 14 colors, of which 5 are not in the CGA 16-color palette.

The Enhanced Graphics Adapter (EGA) is the IBM PC computer display standard specification located between CGA and VGA in terms of graphics performance (that is, color and space resolution). Introduced in 1984 by IBM for its new PC-AT, EGA produced a display of 16 colors at a resolution of up to 640×350 pixels. The EGA card included a 16 kilobyte ROM to extend the system BIOS for additional graphics functions and included the Motorola MC6845 video address generator.

Each of the 16 colors could be assigned a unique RGB color code via a palette mechanism in the 640×350 high-resolution mode; EGA let you choose the displayed colors out of a total of 64 palette colors (two bits per pixel for red, green and blue). EGA also included full 16-color versions of the CGA 640×200 and 320×200 graphics modes; only the 16 CGA/RGBI colors are available in these modes. The original CGA modes are also present, though EGA isn't 100% hardware compatible with CGA. EGA can drive an MDA monitor by a special setting of switches on the board; only 640×350 high-res is available in this mode.

EGA cards used the PC ISA bus, and were available starting in 8-bit versions. The base IBM EGA card came with 64 kilobytes of video memory installed, actually just enough to handle monochrome high-resolution graphics (but allowing for full color in the 640×200 and 320×200 modes). Eventually, most EGA cards and clones would come with a full 256 KB of memory. A few third-party EGA clones (notably the ATI Technologies and Paradise boards) featured a range of extended graphics modes (e.g. 640×400, 640×480 and 720×540), as well as automatic monitor type detection, and sometimes also a special 400-line interlace mode for use on CGA monitors.

The EGA standard was made obsolete by the introduction of VGA by IBM in April 1987 with the PS/2 computer line.

See also Professional Graphics Controller, a much more powerful graphics adapter with an equally short marketing life.

Contents

[edit] Specifications

[edit] Connector

Pin numbers (looking at socket):

Pin assignments
Pin Name Function
1 GND Ground
2 SR Secondary Red (Intensity)
3 PR Primary Red
4 PG Primary Green
5 PB Primary Blue
6 SG Secondary Green (Intensity)
7 SB Secondary Blue (Intensity)
8 H Horizontal Sync
9 V Vertical Sync

[edit] Signal

Type Digital, TTL
Resolution 640h x 350v x 16c, other modes available
H-freq 15.7/21.8 kHz
V-freq 60 Hz
Colors 16/64

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Mueller, Scott (1992) Upgrading and Repairing PCs, Second Edition, Que Books, ISBN 0-88022-856-3
Computer display standards Size comparison
Video hardware Size comparison
MDA | Hercules | CGA | EGA | VGA | MCGA | 8514 | XGA
Display resolutions
QVGA | VGA | SVGA | XGA | XGA+ | SXGA | SXGA+ | UXGA | QXGA | QSXGA | QUXGA | HXGA | HSXGA | HUXGA
Widescreen variants
WXGA | WSXGA/WXGA+ | WSXGA+ | WUXGA | WQXGA | WQSXGA | WHXGA | WHSXGA | WHUXGA | WQUXGA