Video on Oscilloscope (Easy!)
Here is the easiest way to put video on an old analog oscilloscope that has "Z axis" inputs (usually on the back of the scope:
It uses an LM1881 integrated chip and nine other little components to display live video on an oscilloscope screen.
You'll need the following:
(3) 0.1uF caps
(1) 4.7Uf cap
(1) 1000pF cap
(1) 680k resistor
(2) 100k resistors
(1) LM1881 chip
(2) IN4148 diodes
Plus: an oscilloscope with a Z input; a video camera with a composite video out (usually a yellow RCA plug); two thin wires to go to Z input; a DC power supply that can be adjustable to +5vDC (you'll probably need around 3-4vDC); a composite RCA cable to run from camera to circuit; a breadboard or soldering iron; breadboard jumper cables; wires from power supply.
Here's my version on a breadboard. It's only 10 components but I used a lot of jumper cables to keep things simpler for me to see.
You'll see nothing until you hook up the wires to the Z axis (intensity) of the oscilloscope. The picture was black and green, upside down and mirror-image flipped. I pointed the video camera at a TV set. Here is a Voltoren medicine commercial.
User caveats:
1. Use XY mode on the oscilloscope.
2. The black (negative) bands of the diodes should be closer to the LM1881 in the circuit path.
3. Z axis are not reversed, like other versions of this circuit in books. Z Axis + goes to the center pin tip of the RCA plug. Z Axis - goes to the ring/barrel/negative/ground of the RCA plug. When I reversed them I got no picture.
4. The camera (mine was a 1980s JVC) had to be "zoomed in" for this to work. I don't know why! If I zoomed out to wide-angle the circuit stopped working.
5. You only get a small portion of the video that the video camera sees!
6. I set the video camera exposure control to "+" for a brighter image.
7. With 3.6vDC to 4.1vDC I had much less noise in the video than running at 5vDC. Fiddle with the voltage.
8. The oscilloscope probes I used are newer ones that have 1x and 10x. Use the 1x setting, it got a much better signal for this usage. If your probes don't have a switch on them--they're probably 1x anyway.
Some random shots of my self-assembled Elenco kit power supply (from Amazon or eBay). My $5 HP analog oscilloscope from an antiques store/resale shop. The settings on the scope aren't exactly what I ended up using, but they're in the ballpark. As you can see my X and Y are actually A and B on the scope! There's also an unused horizontal input. The "Z axis" is in the back of this scope: so I ran two wires to the two screws in the back and have them wrapped around the front handle for easy access (instead of reaching behind this super heavy scope all the time).