V-by-One US is an electrical digital signaling standard developed by THine Electronics. It succeeds V-by-One HS, offers four times the data rate per signaling lane and is used as internal interface of digital pixel displays.
THine announced the development of the transmission lines for V-by-One US on June 5, 2017.[1] The new specification allows data rates up to 16 Gbit/s per lane, which is 4 times faster than the 4 Gbit/s of V-by-One HS. It enables 4K 60 Hz displays over 2 lanes and 8K 60 Hz displays over 8 lanes.
On September 21, 2018, the company announced it had working samples of the V-by-One US chipset ready.[2] The chipset supports two 16 Gbit/s signalling lanes, which enables a 4K display or four 1080p displays at 60 Hz. The chipset is able to data between 8-lane V-by-One HS and 2-lane V-by-One US.
August 13, 2020, Silicon Creations announced that its Deserializer PMA was used as a V-by-One HS receiver in a 12nm SoC aimed at 8K TV's designed by Novatek Microelectronics.[3]
Interface | Speed per lane | Lanes for 4K 60 Hz | Lanes for 8K 60 Hz |
---|---|---|---|
V-by-One HS | 4 Gb/s | 8 pairs | 32 pairs |
V-by-One US | 16 Gb/s | 2 pairs | 8 pairs |
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V-by-One US.
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