L
Lanham
Just wondering if anyone knows which cord/plug gives the best quality
picture...
cheers,
Perry.
picture...
cheers,
Perry.
Lanham said:Just wondering if anyone knows which cord/plug gives the best quality
picture...
Just wondering if anyone knows which cord/plug gives the best quality
picture...
cheers,
Perry.
on my system. Guess I need the $30 gold plated oxygen free copper
s-video lead instead of the $3 lead I got from Jaycar? - yeah right.
Your mileage will vary with the system components you have.
I would like to know if there is any REAL advantange to using the,
so-called, 'oxygen free copper' cable for AV interconnection.
Has anyone done comparisons or have an objective view as to the advantages
of the so- called 'oxygen free copper' cables?
Do the AV professionals use such cables or simply make sure they keep their
cables well maintained?
You can see the difference if you look carefully, mainly in the saturation
or purity of colours, however the difference is no where near as marked
compared to composite, where you get artefacting in the form of dot-crawl on
high-frequency edges.
David L. Jones said:As I detailed in a previous post some time ago, I saw no real
difference between s-video and RCA using a fairly new and expensive LG
TV and LG DVD player.
I tried really hard to notice differences in both still shots and
moving video in a range of lighting conditions. I think that perhaps I
perceived a minor difference (no better, no worse, just "slightly
different"), but I don't know if that was just wishful thinking. There
was certainly no "wow, look at that" difference, or anything remotely
like it.
I suspect that the quality of RCA and s-video circuits vary widely
between different brand and models of TV's and DVD players. I can
imagine cases where a combination of high quality composite RCA
circuits would give a better quality signal than s-video, and
vice-versa.
Russ said:Hang on, when you say "RCA" do you mean the single-RCA composite output, or
the 3-RCA component output? RCA is just the name of the connector, it
doesn't define the video format, so it's unclear what you are comparing.
Between composite (single socket) and S-Video you should see a big
difference. If you're not I'd suggest there is something wrong somewhere in
the signal chain.
As stated, I did not see any difference between s-video and composite
on my system.
David L. Jones said:As stated, I did not see any difference between s-video
and composite
on my system.
Guess I must either have good composite circuitry, crap
s-video
circuitry, or I need my eyes checked. I tried really hard
to see the
difference and I could not find any. You get that.
Looks like not everyone can expect the dramatic
improvement which
seems to be the general consensus.
Joel de Guzman said:Same here. I don't notice any improvement at all. I use
gold-plated s-vid and RCA, I connect it to Video1 and
Video2 of my TV. I switch back and forth and notice no
difference.
Perhaps my eyes should be checked as well. Sigh!
** That is weird - what DVD discs were you using ??
S- video has a major improvement in colour resolution over
composite.
OK, I'm probably a bit more sensitive to the differences as I've worked as a
broadcast designer and video tech, so I know what to look for. Firstly, you
will never see any difference on analogue broadcast television as it is
inherently composite. You will only see a difference if your source is DVD
and possibly a Digital TV set top box, although that's not guaranteed.
Secondly, you will see the most obvious differences at high-frequency edges,
such as the edge of text. Composite has a lot more colour smearing between
edges, and often has problems with broad areas of colour.
This page has an example:
http://www.michaeldvd.com.au/Articles/VideoArtefacts/VideoArtefactsDotCrawl.
html
But I admit, the majority of technical issues I see in a picture tend to be
more or less irrelevant to the average viewer. But there is a definite
difference, S-Video giving you a sharper, cleaner and more colourful picture
from your DVDs.
I would like to know if there is any REAL advantange to using the,
so-called, 'oxygen free copper' cable for AV interconnection.
conbo said:Use oxygen-free copper to prevent corrosion
taken from the Monster cable web site.