【視聴数 20010】
【チャンネル名 VWestlife】
【タグ radio shack,radioshack,composite,base band,base-band,baseband,video,analog,standard,definition,s-video,svideo,s-vhs,svhs,super vhs,vhs,tv,crt,television,monitor,amdek,color,hitachi,dvd,player,sony,coby,lcd,widescreen,16:9,4:3,aspect ratio,converter,adapter,passive,cable,commodore,64,c64,luma,chroma,y-adapter,review,test,vintage,tandy】
First! Nice comparison of the different video types to s-video… rare haul indeed VWestlife! (P.S. Congrats on the verified; hope to get a Silver Play Button soon)
You need to upload more. I like these videos too much to only get one per week. 😅
Someone said on some vcf talk that commodore monitors were adjusted for some timing difference in the signals somehow. Forgot the specifics and it was a throwaway mention about how commodore had capability to “fix” stuff like that
edit: bukeeee
“Dude! Let’s hook up the Dreamcast from S-Video to composite!”
“W-What? N-No… W-Why would you do that?!”
Hmm… What’s in it?? 🤔
I miss Radio Shack… I drove past their former location in a shopping center where they were starting when I was in High School. The sign is still there under the walkway, but the storefront is empty.
That being said, the last time I went there when the store was still open, around 2009, I was looking for some capacitors to fix a flat panel TV’s power supply. Gone was the “wall-o-components” I remembered from the late 1980’s early 1990’s. Instead they had a tiny box with a pathetic assortment of passive components and maybe 4 or 5 different types of capacitors. None of which were what I needed. But they would have been happy to sell me some overpriced batteries or a remote controlled toy car…
old gpus like mx100 … mx400 often had an s-video output and a passive composite adapter included, and they worked fine. I remember at one time I even made one myself, there is only one capacitor needed and everything works. as far as I remember, the signals have a different frequency and modulation method so that they can be passively mixed. in the opposite direction, it works most likely for the same reason – the inputs are tuned to different frequencies and have different demodulators
close up you can tell but if you’re sitting on a couch then you ay not notice
I would love to reverse engineer it to see what is in it.
That BBC commercial looked OK-ish with the converter until they did an outside shot with vertical lines… my eyes literally started watering.
Keeping Up Appearances! Amazing.
its literally a direct connectionfrom the composite pin to the svideo for luma and a 470pf to 1nF capacitor for chroma
i guess some businesses are just slowing dying in the USA
It’s very relaxing for me watching your videos:)
That instruction video reminds me that I am letting my camera collect dust and the battery to swell… Oof.
I used my S-Video to Composite converter to no end. I dealt with PC’s graphics card S-video output connected to with my CRT TV and VCR, actually :’)
Lower-end PAL AV gear do not actually have S-Video inputs or outputs built in, and SCART converters with S-Video tend to have weird behaviour with S-video (especially with camcorder cables with both S-video and composite).
(Namely VCRs and HDD recorders, at least those from Panasonic. And ANY CRT TV that came with RF and non-RGB SCART only)
Might be just bad luck, but I have to say that S-Video>Composite saved me a lot of headaches when a normal S-video>S-video connection failed. (The converters, cables and settings were OK xd)
And British comedies are the best, Fawlty Towers especially 😀 Greetings from Czech!
One use case I could see for this is if all your RCA inputs where already used you could use this to add another device that maybe didn’t have SVIDEO (like camcorders or game systems or something) . or vice versa
Just in time for breakfast! Really interesting didn’t know that about S Video have a nice Thursday Kevin.
What computer do you use to edit your videos?
I was just grumbling about not having a Radio Shack nearby anymore because I lost my tube of heat sink compound I need for a project.