Latest Forum Posts
Denying pensioners winter fuel allowance
last post by Jitendar Canth
Arsenal 24/25 season
last post by Snaps
[VIDEO] The Last of Us (HBO)
last post by marksparks999
Scams
last post by Snaps
[VIDEO] Red One
last post by Par Mizan
Top Gear really is back!
last post by admars
Mr Bates vs The Post Office
last post by Par Mizan
[VIDEO] Thunderbolts
last post by RJS
[VIDEO] NCIS Origins
last post by Brooky
Post Trump fallout
last post by Pete-MK
Have I Got News For You
last post by Jitendar Canth
[VIDEO] Living on Youtube
last post by admars
[VIDEO] The Rubber-Keyed Wonder
last post by Jitendar Canth
Blakes 7 coming to Blu-Ray
last post by marksparks999

Page 1 of TV has 2 scarts, advice needed on colour difference between both.

Hardware Forum

TV has 2 scarts, advice needed on colour difference between both.

steve-o (Competent) posted this on Monday, 11th February 2002, 20:19

M tv has 2 scarts. I had video into No1 & dvd into No2. After reading someone else saying only 1 (probably No1) was RGB, I swapped them round. Noticed an improvement in Toy Story, it was a bit pixally round some edges in No2. Only thing is the colour has gone a little washed out. Swap it back and the colour is sharp again, but picture is not the best. Any suggestions

RE: TV has 2 scarts, advice needed on colour difference between both.

davidn (Mostly Harmless) posted this on Monday, 11th February 2002, 20:38

Yes you are right DVD needs to go into the scart with RGB in, Scart 1
VCR into scart 2 with composite.
Have set the DVD player menu to output RGB?

This item was edited on Monday, 11th February 2002, 20:39

RE: TV has 2 scarts, advice needed on colour difference between both.

Tony Vado (Competent) posted this on Tuesday, 12th February 2002, 12:36

Reading between the lines (because you don`t say what TV you have) it sounds like you`ve got your colour set garishly high and the RGB image is using the default (more natural) setting. This could give you the impression that the composite feed gives more colourful results, but once you get used to RGB`s more accurate reproduction, you`ll turn the colour down for everything else aswell. To prove/disprove this theory, you should try turning the colour down in RGB mode, as in many cases even setting it to zero will have absolutely no effect (because the colours are delivered in their intended shades automatically). I know from personal experience that this is definitely the case with Philips/Panasonic sets, but I found that turning up the contrast (to unusually high levels) adds the vibrancy that you think is lost in the colour.

Go back to Hardware Forum threads, or All Forum threads