Chris_R Posted March 4, 2005 Share Posted March 4, 2005 Hi,I have an old tv with only an ariel in, and I have a graphics card with SVid and Phono (by using an adaptor) out. Is there anyway I can connect the computer to the tv to watch DVDs etc?I've seen a phono to ariel convertor lead, is it as simple as this? Sorry if this topic has come up before, I did a search but found nothing. Cheers! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gareth Posted March 4, 2005 Share Posted March 4, 2005 Nope. The phono on the graphics card will be spitting out composite video, and the aerial socket on your telly will be looking for a modulated UHF signal - chalk and cheese. The only way you'd be able to get something from your PC to that particular telly would be by sending the video signal through some sort of RF modulator. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Freddie Posted March 4, 2005 Share Posted March 4, 2005 I've seen a phono to ariel convertor lead, is it as simple as this?<{POST_SNAPBACK}>No. What you need is an RF modulator, it modulates the signal onto a UHF carrier wave (I think) and the TV sees it as a TV channel. EDIT: Damn you Gareth!EDIT: Like one of theseMaplin Code: L14AQ if deeplink doesn't work Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chris_R Posted March 4, 2005 Author Share Posted March 4, 2005 Thanks very much, It seemed a bit simple!I'll look in to one of those modulators.Cheers Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MarcT Posted March 4, 2005 Share Posted March 4, 2005 Thanks very much, It seemed a bit simple!I'll look in to one of those modulators.Cheers<{POST_SNAPBACK}> Lots of VCRs have a "composite video in" (usually a phono, SCART, or BNC socket), and spit out a modulated UHF signal for your telly. So, if you've got a video close by plug it into that... EDIT: Some copy-protected DVDs will intentionally bugger up the composite video signal. Most TVs will still show the picture, but a VCR may not. If you can see your PC desktop on the TV, but DVDs fail that's the reason. Google for "macrovision" for more information. Cheers,Marc Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Modge Posted March 4, 2005 Share Posted March 4, 2005 yeah nackered old video players (which generally fail mechanically before they go electronically) make great MUX \ DeMUX's (we use them as demux's a lot owing to having a modulated AV network round the building) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
paulears Posted March 4, 2005 Share Posted March 4, 2005 Thanks very much, It seemed a bit simple!I'll look in to one of those modulators.Cheers<{POST_SNAPBACK}> EDIT: Some copy-protected DVDs will intentionally bugger up the composite video signal. Most TVs will still show the picture, but a VCR may not. [<{POST_SNAPBACK}> Videos have had all sorts of so called copy protection since the early 80's - Star Trek the Movie was the first one I came accross. The common trick, before Macrovision improved the system, was simply to insert a 1v spike just after the colour burst. The tv sets of the day simply ignored it and you got a decent picture - if you tried to re-record a 'protected' video, the spike would convince the auto gain on the video recorder that there was too much signal, so it reduced it, taking the brightness right down. The sync pulse would get reduced a bit too, and then you'd lose lock and the picture would roll. Macrovision does this distortion of the waveform much more neatly. In general, vision mixers with input sync strip off the incoming sync pulses, then generate new ones at the output - much to the annoyance of the copyright protection companies. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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