mca_bagom Posted October 6, 2004 Share Posted October 6, 2004 I just got a 50in Panasonic DLP tv. When I hook up my Denon 2200, should I run it with through the S-video or Component(3 videocables)? I would normamly run it through the Denon 3803, but it is somewhere in the box after moving. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Speedball Posted October 6, 2004 Share Posted October 6, 2004 This may or may not help but on my 27" Sony the video(picture) is running through the "s" cable and the audio is running through two component cables. I just didn't use one component cable. This may get you started, but there is probably a way to get the "best" out of your system from someones elses advice. ..cheers.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dougdrake Posted October 6, 2004 Share Posted October 6, 2004 Run it through component. Much more natural picture, IMO. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gcoker Posted October 7, 2004 Share Posted October 7, 2004 Yes component connection..I don't think any progressive players will output through the S-video. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Griffinator Posted October 7, 2004 Share Posted October 7, 2004 ---------------- On 10/7/2004 7:51:41 AM gcoker wrote: I don't think any progressive players will output through the S-video. ---------------- That would be correct. S-Video does not have the necessary bandwidth to carry a non-interlaced 480p signal. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
boomer9911 Posted October 8, 2004 Share Posted October 8, 2004 DD has it right, you keep the signal "seperate" as received through CV, if you use SV, the signal is now cramped into "1" line as opposed to "3" lines and signal seperation, easy math... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Griffinator Posted October 9, 2004 Share Posted October 9, 2004 Actually, that's not quite correct. Composite video is a summed "composite" signal over 1 cable. S-Video sends color and black level info on separate lines (it's a 4-pin cable, 2 conductors for the color signal, 2 for the black level) Component sends color, black level, and luminance on individual cables. The best signal transfer available is usually only on the absolute highest end players - RGBHV - comes in two flavors, either a 15-pin VGA cable (like your computer monitor) or a set of 5 BNC (coax-type) cables, with the transfer consisting of Red, Blue, Green, Black, and White, each on discrete connections. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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