Breaking Down the SDI Standards
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For engineers, technical directors, and utility crews, "SDI" isn't just one blanket term. Using the wrong standard can result in a total signal drop, intermittent flickering, or a screen full of digital artifacts.
To understand the differences, we have to look at bandwidth (bitrate), frequency, and data mapping.
HD-SDI vs. 3G-SDI: The Frame Rate Leap
While legacy HD-SDI (SMPTE 292M) topped out at 1.485 Gbps—enough for 1080i or 720p—3G-SDI (SMPTE 424M) doubled that bandwidth to 3 Gbps. This jump is what allowed the industry to move from interlaced video to smooth, progressive 1080p at 60fps.
When dealing with 3G-SDI, you will often encounter two different mapping types. It is crucial to know the difference because Level A and Level B gear often do not talk to each other without a converter:
- Level A: Sends the entire 1080p60 frame in a single, linear data stream. It features lower latency and is widely preferred in modern production.
- Level B: Multiplexes two 1.5 Gbps virtual streams into one cable (essentially acting like dual-link HD-SDI). While older gear relies on it, it adds a tiny bit of processing overhead.
6G-SDI vs. 12G-SDI: The 4K Crux
When 4K (Ultra HD) arrived, standard 3G cables couldn't handle the massive data load. This forced a choice between 6G-SDI (SMPTE ST 2081) and 12G-SDI (SMPTE ST 2082).
- 6G-SDI (6 Gbps): This standard can carry 4K video, but only up to 30fps. If you try to push a 4K 60fps sports broadcast through a 6G pipeline, it simply won't work. It is mostly used in cinema workflows where 24fps or 30fps is the standard.
- 12G-SDI (12 Gbps): The reigning heavyweight of modern live production. It cames into play to support 4K at a full 60fps over a single coaxial cable. It provides four times the bandwidth of 3G-SDI, packing massive amounts of data into high-frequency signals.
Technical Comparison
If you are audit-checking your gear or wiring a rack, use this breakdown to understand exactly what each standard demands:
| SDI Standard | SMPTE Spec | Max Data Rate | Max Resolution & Frame Rate | Signal Frequency |
| HD-SDI | ST 292 | 1.485 Gbps | 1080i @ 60fps / 720p @ 60fps | ~750 MHz |
| 3G-SDI | ST 424 | 2.970 Gbps | 1080p @ 60fps | ~1.5 GHz |
| 6G-SDI | ST 2081 | 5.940 Gbps | 4K (UHD) @ 30fps | ~3 GHz |
| 12G-SDI | ST 2082 | 11.88 Gbps | 4K (UHD) @ 60fps | ~6 GHz |

How Frequency Affects Hardware Choices
As you move from HD-SDI up to 12G-SDI, the frequency of the electrical signal increases dramatically (from 750 MHz up to 6 GHz). This high frequency completely changes how the signal behaves inside the copper wire, which dictates how professionals must handle their infrastructure:
Cable Attenuation (Signal Loss)
High-frequency signals degrade much faster over distance than low-frequency signals.
- A standard RG59 cable might easily carry an HD-SDI signal 300 feet.
- If you run a 12G-SDI signal down that exact same old RG59 cable, it might drop out after just 30 to 50 feet. For 12G, you must upgrade to high-density, precision digital video cables (like Belden 1694A or 4794R) engineered to minimize high-frequency attenuation.
BNC Connectors Matter
You cannot just crimp a random, cheap BNC connector onto a cable and expect 12G-SDI performance.
- Older SDI connectors were rated for 50 Ohms or 75 Ohms at lower frequencies.
- For 6G and 12G-SDI, you must use true 75-Ohm connectors rated specifically for 6 GHz or 12 GHz. A mismatched impedance at those high frequencies creates "return loss" (reflections inside the cable), which destroys the digital data stream.
Match Lowest Standard
When configuring a system, always match your lowest common denominator. A 12G-SDI camera can plug into a 3G-SDI monitor, but the camera must be stepped down to output a 1080p signal. If you leave the camera at 4K 60fps, the 3G monitor will simply display "No Signal" because its processing chips cannot sample data at a 6 GHz clock rate.