7.5 KiB
Sony PT2 Camera Control Protocol Working Summary
This is a working model for restoring the Sony RCP-TX7 style PT2 camera control link. It is based on bench captures and manuals gathered in this repo, not on an official Sony protocol specification.
Scope
- Target device: Sony RCP-TX7 camera control panel from the 1990s.
- Likely protocol family: Sony PT2-era camera/RCP control.
- Evidence: newer Sony RCP manuals describe a
PT2/PT7mode switch, andPT2is documented for the same camera line that the TX7 controls. - Current goal: identify enough of the host/CCU side protocol to restore useful panel operation.
Electrical Layer
Confirmed wiring and levels:
| RCP 10-pin pin | Cable color | Current identification |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | red | spare/unknown |
| 2 | black | VBS/composite video |
| 3 | green | VBS/composite video ground |
| 4 | orange | serial data RCP -> CCU/camera |
| 5 | blue | serial/data ground |
| 6 | grey | serial/data ground |
| 7 | purple | serial data CCU/camera -> RCP |
| 8 | white/purple | spare/unknown |
| 9 | brown | ground/DC return |
| 10 | brown-white | +12 V power |
Observed idle measurements:
- Pin 4 relative to pin 9: about
-9 V. - Pin 7 relative to pin 9: about
+0.037 Vuntil driven by the adapter. - This strongly indicates true RS-232 signaling, not TTL UART.
Bench adapter setup:
- Adapter RS-232
RXDto RCP pin 4. - Adapter RS-232
TXDto RCP pin 7. - Adapter
GNDto RCP pin 9. - Serial settings used throughout:
38400 8N1.
Frame Shape
Most useful traffic is six bytes:
prefix1 prefix2 command state value checksum
Current checksum hypothesis:
checksum = 0x5A XOR prefix1 XOR prefix2 XOR command XOR state XOR value
Examples:
| Frame | Meaning in current model |
|---|---|
00 00 00 00 80 DA |
RCP heartbeat/status while not active |
00 00 07 80 00 DD |
RCP CAM POWER event |
00 00 15 80 00 CF |
CALL high/on state |
00 00 15 00 00 4F |
CALL low/off state |
07 80 45 20 D0 68 |
RCP response to host-sent CALL high/low pair |
07 80 45 30 D0 78 |
sibling CALL-response-family frame, seen once |
The RCP-origin non-heartbeat responses discovered so far usually begin with
07 80. Host frames tested so far usually use 00 00.
Baseline RCP Behavior
With power and no valid host session, the RCP repeatedly sends:
00 00 00 00 80 DA
Only a few front-panel actions have produced unique frames while disconnected:
| Control | RCP-origin frame |
|---|---|
| CAM POWER | 00 00 07 80 00 DD |
| CALL high/on | 00 00 15 80 00 CF |
| CALL low/off | 00 00 15 00 00 4F |
Most other controls have not yet emitted unique frames in the disconnected or
CONNECT NOT ACT state.
Display State
Many checksum-valid and even some invalid host-side frames make the RCP display
CONNECT NOT ACT.
Known interpretation:
CONNECT NOT ACTmeans the panel sees activity that looks connection-related.- It does not mean the panel is active.
- It does not prove checksum validity.
- It can remain on screen while serial behavior changes underneath.
Unknown:
- The host sequence that changes the panel from
CONNECT NOT ACTto an active control state.
Discovery / Status Query Surface
The strongest discovery/status pattern is:
Host primer: 00 00 00 00 80 DA
Host query: 00 00 XX 00 80 checksum
RCP reply: 07 80 ... ... ... checksum
Selected confirmed examples:
| Host sequence | RCP response |
|---|---|
00 -> B0 |
07 80 6C 40 30 C1 |
00 -> B2 |
07 80 36 10 0C F7 |
00 -> B3 |
07 80 36 10 2C D7 |
00 -> B4 |
07 80 6D 40 30 C0 |
00 -> B5 |
07 80 6D 20 D8 48 |
Other A/B/C region queries also return structured responses. The response set looks like a readable status/capability surface, not random noise.
Important latch behavior:
- Many discovery/status responses are one-shot after power-up.
- Repeating the same query without a power cycle often returns only heartbeat.
- Re-sending the primer does not always clear this state.
- Broad unlatch sweeps after
B5andA0did not find a reset/unlatch command.
Working interpretation:
- The host/CCU probably performs a discovery or capability read early in the session.
- The panel then enters a state where repeated discovery reads are suppressed.
- A missing session-advance or keepalive step probably follows.
CALL Event Path
This is the most reproducible event-response path found so far.
The host can send the same frames the RCP uses for CALL state:
CALL high: 00 00 15 80 00 CF
CALL low: 00 00 15 00 00 4F
If the host sends CALL high then CALL low with a small inter-frame gap, the RCP responds:
07 80 45 20 D0 68
Confirmed details:
- The physical CALL button is not required.
- Cold no-button startup injection works with both 50 ms and 80 ms gaps.
- CALL high alone does not trigger the response.
- CALL low alone does not trigger the response.
- Sending high and low back-to-back is less reliable than adding a gap.
Known sibling response:
07 80 45 30 D0 78
This was observed once during timing tests. It shares the 07 80 45 response
family, but the exact state meaning is unknown.
What does not work:
- Answering
07 80 45 20 D0 68with00 00 45 00 80 9F,00 00 45 20 D0 EF, or exact echo did not change the serial state. - Triggering the CALL
0x45path and then sending00 -> B5did not produce the knownB5discovery response. - The CALL path is real and useful for probing, but is not currently the activation handshake.
What We Know
- The link is RS-232-like, not TTL.
- The baud rate is
38400 8N1. - The six-byte frame shape and XOR checksum hypothesis explain observed frames.
- The RCP sends heartbeat continuously when not active.
- The RCP can parse host traffic and produce structured, checksum-valid responses.
- The B/A/C command regions expose the cleanest currently mapped one-shot readable response blocks.
- Commands outside B/A/C have also been tested; most were heartbeat-only,
CONNECT NOT ACTparser-visible, CALL-path related, or context-sensitive rather than part of the stable mapped response table. - The CALL event path can be synthesized by the host without pressing the physical button.
- The panel can remain visibly at
CONNECT NOT ACTwhile still responding in protocol-specific ways.
What We Do Not Know
- The complete PT2 session startup handshake.
- The frame or cadence that moves the RCP into an active state.
- The meaning of most response fields.
- Whether
07 80is always the RCP-origin response prefix. - Whether host frames always use
00 00, or if other prefixes are needed for active mode. - How camera/CCU identity, camera model, or capability negotiation is encoded.
- Whether the one-shot discovery latch is intentional protocol behavior or a side effect of an incomplete session.
- Whether video/composite pins carry any status needed for full operation.
Restoration Strategy
Near-term practical strategy:
- Treat PT2 as the target personality.
- Keep using RS-232 at
38400 8N1. - Use
00 -> Bx/Ax/Cxstyle queries to map readable status blocks. - Use the cold CALL high/low pair as a known host stimulus to verify the RCP is still parsing traffic.
- Search for the missing session-advance or keepalive command after discovery, not inside the CALL path.
- If possible, capture a working PT2 CCU/RCP exchange; that would collapse a lot of the search space.
Most promising unknown:
- A host-side session cadence or identity/status frame after discovery that
makes
CONNECT NOT ACTbecome active.