Moderator: Dictators in Training
Component video is capable of producing signals such as 480i, 480p, 576i, 576p, 720p, 1080i, and 1080p.
Jay wrote:So with all that in mind does that mean that the quality of the picture will be the same whether I use component or HDMI cables? If that's the case I might just stick with my component cables.
Tikker wrote:Jay wrote:So with all that in mind does that mean that the quality of the picture will be the same whether I use component or HDMI cables? If that's the case I might just stick with my component cables.
you really shouldn't notice a difference
You'll find people who'll tell you they can tell the difference between coax and optical SPDIF, or can see the difference between 100fps and 85fps
they're also mysteriously the people who buy speakers that have ranges from 20Hz to 40k Hz (ie shit mostly out of the range of human hearing) and then look down on your stuff
the big advantage of HDMI is that you have 1 cable that does video + audio, instead of 4 seperate cables for the component setup(3 video, 1 spdif)
Jay wrote:Is it comparable to the difference between S-Video vs. Component? That I can tell the difference of but only slightly.
Tikker wrote:Jay wrote:Is it comparable to the difference between S-Video vs. Component? That I can tell the difference of but only slightly.
s-video does have a resolution limitation iirc
I don't think s-video will do more than 1024x768
I'm 100% sure it won't do 720p
again, notice finawin saying he can tell the diff between 85 and 100 fps, exactly what I was talking about
And Atensen, that's not quite the same thing
Insane high quality with full human audible range vs insane high quality with range way above/below human hearing is what I'm talking about
comparing low quality to high quality is kind of obvious that you'd tell the difference
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