Ad
News

Trident's Digital TV Video Processor With Comb Decoder

Published on December 21, 2001

Trident Microsystems just let us know about its new DPTV-3D chip, which integrates a 3D digital comb video decoder for NTSC, PAL, and SECAM formats. Read more

ATI's Analog Video Decoder/Stereo Audio Processor

Published on January 04, 2002

Ever since ATI's announcement last year that it would be licensing its technology and silicon to other companies, it seems like the company has been moving closer to the chip business, and not just in graphics. Read more

Philips' 9-Bit Video Decoder

Published on November 27, 2001

Personal video recording (PVR) via hard drives looks like it's set to replace the old VCR sitting on top of your television. Read more

Govt computer surveillance rings alarm bells

Published on May 27, 2004

Nine months after Congress shut down a controversial Pentagon computer-surveillance program, the U.S. Read more

Last Reviews & Articles

The State Of The Personal Computer

Published on November 25, 2008

Where were we in 2008 and where are we heading in 2009? In his State of the Personal Computer address, Alan Dang shares his insights as a user of three different platforms--Mac, Windows, and Linux. Read more

Tom’s Winter 2008 Hard Drive Guide

Published on November 24, 2008

Flash-based drives take the performance segment by storm, but the good old hard drive still provides the best bang for the buck as capacities reach 1.5 terabytes. We scanned all the available offerings and found the best drives for winter 2008. Read more

Efficiency: Core 2 Nukes Atom On The Desktop

Published on November 21, 2008

Atom is geared for low-cost, low-power netbooks and nettops, while the device is a poor choice for desktop PC applications. We show you why Core 2 is better, and give some guidance on how to pick the best power supply for your low-power application. Read more

Radeon HD 4870 X2: Four Cards Compared

Published on November 19, 2008

Not only do we have four super-fast Radeon HD 4870 X2s to test, but also a list of 31 other graphics configurations including CrossFire and SLI setups. If you're in the market for AMD's fastest card available, you'll want to see this. Read more

 

S-Video and Comb Filters

Advanced Search

There are 194 identified and unidentified users. To see the list of identified users, Click here



Word :   Username :  
 
Bottom
Author
 Thread : S-Video and Comb Filters
 
More Information

Archived from groups: alt.video.laserdisc (More info?)

 

Hey everybody I just got my first LD player today so I had a quick question:

If I have a Pioneer LD player with a 3-line digital comb filter and an
analog tube television without any built-in comb filter, I should use the
S-Video connection rather than Composite video, correct? I did some A-B
comparisons between the two and S-Video definitely seemed to win out in
terms of detail and color. I've read some reviews that say Composite can
sometimes yield better results, but that's only when the TV itself has a
better filter than the player, right?

Actual model is Pioneer CLD-S350, TV is a cheapo ESA 27". I'm using
shielded video cables but nothing expensive, just RCA and Acoustic Research.

- Jeremy

Related Product

Register or log in to remove.

More Information

Archived from groups: alt.video.laserdisc (More info?)

 

I used to have a basic RCA Colortrak tv with a cheap comb filter.
Virtually any player I hooked up via the S-Video looked better than
Composite.
I now use a 1994 Proscan tv set with a digital 3 line comb filter.
This filter is equal to the S-video output of the players I've used,
such as the Panasonic LX900 or Pioneer CLD D704. In othe words, if you
do A/B switching between composite and S-Video, you really can't discern
any difference.
However, when you jump up to players with 3D adaptive filters, it's
usually best to use the S-Video output. I have my HLD X9 hooked up via
the S-Video output. You need to, in order to utilize the 3D adaptive
comb filter.
The only true test is your eyes. Compare both of the outputs on the
player and choose the one that provides the least NTSC artifacting! The
one with the less dot crawl on the edges is the way to go.
Use a CAV disc. Do a still frame and then do an A/B comparison. The
output with the less dotcrawl on the edges is ideal.
Kevin

More Information

Archived from groups: alt.video.laserdisc (More info?)

 

"Jeremy Gillow" <jgillow@cfl.rr.com> wrote in message
news:lhIKd.4011$JO2.2244@tornado.tampabay.rr.com...
> If I have a Pioneer LD player with a 3-line digital comb filter and an
> analog tube television without any built-in comb filter,

All televisions have a comb filter of some sort. The comb filter is what
allows the set to display a video signal from a composite video
connection.

> I should use the
> S-Video connection rather than Composite video, correct? I did some
> A-B
> comparisons between the two and S-Video definitely seemed to win out
> in
> terms of detail and color.

There's your answer, then. Your TV player has a better comb filter than
your TV.

More Information

Archived from groups: alt.video.laserdisc (More info?)

 

Use which ever connection looks better. =)



Go to:
 

Google ads