S-Video Cable
A AV cable for Sega Dreamcast systems that outputs separated (Y/C) and composite video, and stereo audio. Compatible with all regions. Generic version of the HKT-8000.
Description
This S-Video Cable is a third party s-video and composite video cable for the Dreamcast. The Dreamcast uses a Multi AV port, a proprietary connector that allowed different types of analogue video cables to be attached. While the bundled cables were composite video and stereo audio, the Dreamcast supports higher‑quality outputs such as S‑Video, RGB SCART (in PAL regions), and VGA. This s‑video cable plugs into the Multi AV port on one end and provides an s‑video connector in lieu of composite video, in addition to stereo RCA plugs on the other.
The advantage of s‑video is that it separates the video signal into two channels: luma (brightness) and chroma (colour), which reduces colour bleeding and dot crawl compared to composite. The result is a noticeably sharper image, especially on CRT televisions or capture devices that accept s‑video. Composite, in theory, can still look good but requires high quality components not seen on consumer hardware. Moving from composite to s-video provides the biggest jump in image quality, with diminishing returns as you work up to full quality RGB (SCART) / VGA).
These cables were widely available from third‑party manufacturers and inexpensive, usually bundled with both s‑video and composite connectors on the same lead. Sega’s official cable only has the s-video and although thin, is well engineered. The ideal and my preferred solution at the time was to use the official VGA Box, which allowed for full 480p in select titles along with s-video and composite as a fall back. These however were expensive and today quite uncommon. Both the official S-PIN Cable and VGA Box were effectively exclusive to the Japanese market as western consumers generally lacked the equipment and interest in video and graphics quality.