DIY Custom ZeeVee Hydra DIN Cables

by bm_00 in Circuits > Electronics

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DIY Custom ZeeVee Hydra DIN Cables

hydracomponent.jpg
hydraVGA.jpg
Component Finished.jpg
VGA Finished.jpg

The ZeeVee Hydra Cables can be expensive. A single cable can be $50+. In a professional/commercial environment this is great, but if you need a cable quick and cheap can be a hassle.


This guide will show you the ZeeVee Hydra's 13 pin DIN connector pinout and how to make your own cables for a fraction of the cost. It will cover both the VGA & Component Cables.

Supplies

Materials.jpg
VGA.jpg
3.5plug.jpg
componentcord.jpg
rcacord.jpg
multimeter.jpg
sodlerIron.jpg
DinAmazon.jpg
Conenctor Pieces.jpg

Materials for VGA Cord:

13- pin DIN connector

VGA Cable

3.5mm TRS Audio Cable


Any VGA cord will work. Any wire with a male 3.5mm TRS jack will work. Can even cut off old headphones.

I used a male to male VGA cord & a 3.5mm Audio extension cable(male to female).



Materials for Component Cord:

13- pin DIN connector

Component Cable

RCA/Composite Cable


Any component cord will work as long as it has the Green, Blue, Red video RCA ends and the White & Red audio RCA ends (5 plugs on an end).

I used a PlayStation 2(PS2) Component cord & a standard 3 RCA connector cord for my RCA/Composite cable. Only 2 plugs are needed on the RCA cord so I removed one. I kept the yellow & white, removed the red.




Make sure to use a round 13-pin DIN connector! Other pin counts will not work. The DIN connector is the same as that on an Atari ST.


Tools:

Multimeter

Wire Strippers/Scissors

Pliers

Solder Iron

Solder


You will need to be confident in soldering small objects in tight areas to complete this task.

Prepare Your Cords

VGA Before Cut.jpg
VGA Stripped.jpg
Component Cut.jpg
Component before Cut.jpg

These steps will vary depending upon what cables you chose. All cables require removing one end to start.


VGA Cord:

VGA: Cut off one of the ends.

3.5mm: Cut off one of the ends so you still have a male end on the cord.


You should be left with a cord with a male VGA end(pins) & a cord with a male 3.5mm jack.


Component Cord:

Component: Cut off the ends of one side of the cord. In my instance the PS2 side.

RCA: Cut off the ends on none side of the cord.


You should be left with a cord with a Red, Green, Blue, White, & Red RCA plugs and a cord with Yellow & White RCA plugs.


After you cut of the ends strip each individual wire back about a quarter inch.



ZeeVee Pinout

VGA Pinout.jpg
Component Pinout.jpg

Attached is the pinout of the 13-Pin DIN connector on the ZeeVee modulators & Hydra Cables.


The pinouts are the view looking into the connector on the ZvPro unit. This is the same view as if you plug your 13 pin DIN connector into the ZvPro and look at where the wires get soldered to the pins. Its a 1;1 matchup when soldering.


All the grounds are internally shared on a ZvPro.

Find Your Cable Pinout

meterOhms.jpg
VGA-connector-Pinout.jpg
ComponentOriginal.jpg
RCACable.jpg
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VGA Cord:

1) Put Multimeter into diode/ohms/continuity mode.

2) Connect one meter probe to any of the wires that you stripped in step #1

3) Using the other meter probe touch it against each of the pins in the VGA connector until the meter beeps

4) When meter beeps take note of what color wire & which pin correspond. Write these down. The VGA pin numbers can be determined from a diagram or they are printed inside the connector next to each end pin.

5) Some wires may connect multiple pins. Make sure to check them all.

6) Once all the wires are matched to a pin write down the corresponding function of each pin/wire set. Use the above diagram to help.

7) Repeat the process for the 3.5mm plug.

8) Once everything is written down you are ready to move on


Note: There may be some pins on your VGA connector that have no match on the 13-Pin din connector. This is okay, they are not used in this instance. VGA Pins 4, 9, 11 are examples.


Component Cord:

1) Put Multimeter into diode/ohms/continuity mode.

2) Connect one meter probe to any of the wires that you stripped in step #1

3) Using the other meter probe touch it against the center pin of each RCA connector until the meter beeps

4) When meter beeps take note of what color wire & which pin/connector correspond. Write these down.

5) Do the same for each shield/ground on each RCA connector.

6) Some wires may connect multiple pins. Make sure to check them all.

7) Once all the wires are matched to a pin write down the corresponding function of each pin/wire set. Use the above diagrams to help.

8) Repeat the process for the RCA cable.

9) Once everything is written down you are ready to move on


Note: Any extra grounds can be soldered to any ground pin. Sharing is okay.

My Pinouts

Mychart.JPG

The following pinout colors are what I used for my cables. Mine are supplied for guide purposes. Yours will likely vary depending upon cable manufacture/type. You will need to determine your own pinout using a multimeter on continuity mode.

Prep the End

1) Make sure to slide the black cover for the 13-pin DIN connector over the wires before soldering. It is easy to forget!

2) Place the cables in the strain relief clamp, and figure out how much wire( length) is needed to solder onto the pin part. It is a lot less then you may think. Too much wire and the end will not sit right and wires may pull off.

3) Once it is determined how much wire is needed trim each individual wire to the appropriate length. Make sure the end of each individual wire is still stripped.

Solder It Up

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Place the 13-Pin din connector into a clamp or vice. Be mindful to only clamp by the black plastic part not the pins as they will break off. The shorter pins(rear) should be facing up/towards you. These are the pins you solder to.


Solder each wire to the corresponding pin. I had best luck soldering down in columns. Pins: (1,5,9) (2,6,10) (3,7,11) (4,8,12) (13). Your experience may vary, do it however you find best.


The pins are extremely small and close together. It takes practice.

Put the End Together

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There should be 2 metal pieces that make up the outer shell of the 13-pin DIN connector. One metal piece has the strain relief clamp and 2 separated notches(side 1). The other metal piece will have a long notch in it (side 2).

The black plastic part with the pins will have 2 sets of bumps. One set is comprised of 2 bumps with a gap in middle & the other a solid bump.


1) Feed the wires through the strain relief clamp.

2) Line up the notches and bumps. Side 1 & 2 should "snap" together.

3) Wrap a thin piece of tape around it the two halves to hold it.

4) Crimp the strain relief connector using pliers.

5) Slide the plastic end cover back up the wires and over the pins. There is a small notch on the top side that keeps it in place

Congrats!

Component Finished.jpg
VGA Finished.jpg

Plug in your cable and give it a try! Hopefully everything went well. if not see troubleshooting and/or drop a comment below and I will try to help out.

Troubleshooting

Cable Does Not Work:

  1. Make sure the ZvPro is configured for the correct cable type. Auto detect does not always work great.
  2. Is the 13-pin din connector plugged all the way into the ZvPro?
  3. Check all your wiring. You may have mixed up some pins. Some pins maybe bridged in the connector. Some may have fallen off. Use your multimeter.
  4. Check the refresh rate on device. Needs to be 60hz!


Weird picture:

  1. Check all wiring some may be reversed.
  2. The Picture can be adjusted in the ZvPro control interface. May need to change resolution and calibrate.
  3. ZvPro is set to wrong mode. Make sure is set to VGA for VGA and Component for Component


Picture Cut-off

  1. The Picture can be adjusted in the ZvPro control interface. May need to change resolution and calibrate.
  2. Picture may need to be adjusted on TV. Look for zoom & over scan settings

Extras

  1. ZeeVee sells a cable to connect certain DIRECTV receivers to their ZvPro modulators. The provided pinouts of the ZvPro modulator should help you make your own cable to connect to a DIRECTV receiver.


  1. I used a ZvPro 610 for this tutorial. Pinouts should be same across line.


  1. I have not had stability with a 1920 x 1080 resolution over VGA. It only works sometimes. I am not sure if it is my modulator or cable. All supported lower resolutions work fine.

Thanks To

The pinouts for this guide were discovered completely on own. There was no help from ZeeVee or any 3rd party source. They were discovered without even purchasing a Hydra Cable.



ZeeVee Hydra Component Cable:

https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/shopping q=tbn:ANd9GcTRgeJv5xhtzFgNP03viQrVE42EMvDacfXrA7LgrWNoRQ 4A7B67IsjE47ZzDJlSn-p750GMhZZogBxGt_FWrSBCeImUS2aBg6dTzucK7M-uBzUMo8azNIl1


ZeeVee Hydra VGA Cable:

https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/shopping?q=tbn:ANd9GcSZ2TCPhgC4eMRQd3qg_0bZx-egyUOzquKbPwSEukY wYFi3OeY7DWaHhyA_O1ert3GNZUtzI-nu4UyTtnHTFMxX5XumBopzMO7S6uCbNDZDmC72EMdtmHHzzg


13Pin Din Connector:

https://forums.raspberrypi.com/viewtopic.php?t=115624


VGA Pinout:

https://www.etechnophiles.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/VGA-connector-Pinout.jpg


Multimeter:

https://cdn.sparkfun.com/assets/learn_tutorials/1/01_Multimeter_Tutorial-09.jpg


Component Pinout:

https://www.retrofixes.com/cdn/shop/files/6183o5836-L._AC_SX569.jpg?v=1717784243&width=1445


Multimeter:

https://www.ic-components.com/upfile/images/32/20240904095421969.jpg


VGA end:

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/81/Vga-cable.jpg


3.5mm Cord:

https://images.monoprice.com/productlargeimages/6501.jpg


Component Cord:

https://images.monoprice.com/productlargeimages/3201.jpg


3.5mm Pinout:

https://d29rinwu2hi5i3.cloudfront.net/article_media/376a839a-cca1-4f35-ad66-df9847943ad0/trs-wire-connections.jpg


RCA Cord:

https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/shopping?q=tbn:ANd9GcT3tHIU6KNefeuTV3-_gIqpHaUpiZ8fsQw3gBpH3f8l82Im7C fcAWmtcm-LRe5l7aTnMgQKkRDflh2iPhwEfKWnuGSozcoAjTe dQCCoJcLeuBNoGtjXzOz


Solder iron:

https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71t5X8FgRrL.jpg


13-Pin Din Connector:

https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51VpvpMvaZS.jpg