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54 Posts
Hello,
I have just joined the projector club just recently. And I am really happy with what I have got, which is a DLP projector. I have heard that image quality can be improved through the use of ?video scalers? or ?up converters?.
Now I am a bit confused in relation to what type of video scaler would be best suited to my system.
The following are input types for my projector:
1 composite video (BNC)
S-video input (2 BNC connectors)
VGA or up to 800 x 600 S-VGA input (15-Pin connector)
RGB video (5 BNC connectors RGBHV)
RGB video up to 17 kHz interlaced and 38 kHz non-interlaced
What would therefore be the best solution to take total advantage of my projectors capabilities?
I have seen some video scalers that can output at 800x600 and produce non-interlaced image processing.
I was wondering whether RGBHV is the same as VGA 800x600 outputing but using a VGA to RGBHV cable?
If not then could anyone suggest an affordable video scaler, under $1000US (no more than 2000$ Australian)?
Thanks
AEther
I have just joined the projector club just recently. And I am really happy with what I have got, which is a DLP projector. I have heard that image quality can be improved through the use of ?video scalers? or ?up converters?.
Now I am a bit confused in relation to what type of video scaler would be best suited to my system.
The following are input types for my projector:
1 composite video (BNC)
S-video input (2 BNC connectors)
VGA or up to 800 x 600 S-VGA input (15-Pin connector)
RGB video (5 BNC connectors RGBHV)
RGB video up to 17 kHz interlaced and 38 kHz non-interlaced
What would therefore be the best solution to take total advantage of my projectors capabilities?
I have seen some video scalers that can output at 800x600 and produce non-interlaced image processing.
I was wondering whether RGBHV is the same as VGA 800x600 outputing but using a VGA to RGBHV cable?
If not then could anyone suggest an affordable video scaler, under $1000US (no more than 2000$ Australian)?
Thanks
AEther