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Old 03-08-2005, 09:55 PM   #1 (permalink)
Psycho
 
HDTV as monitor

I thought this would be popular, but when I search I didnt find much.
Anyways, I have a geforce 5200 and I use my Phillips 46" HDTV as my monitor for my computer.
I use S-video as my cables and such...
I recently installed new drivers off of nvidia website and they are screwing everything up!
before the picture wasnt perfect, but now its fuzzy, (like the refresh rate slowed) does anyone know where I can get some good drivers, or why these ones screwed everything up.
Also my screen positioniong keeps moving to one side or the other so like 1/8-1/4" gets cut off. what is causing this?
Is s-vid the best cables to run to my TV?
what could I do to get a good picture?
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Old 03-09-2005, 01:31 AM   #2 (permalink)
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Location: Arizona
I can't answer your question personally because I have no experience doing this with an HDTV, just a standard TV, but I found 2 useful guides you might want to try:

http://www.digitalconnection.com/sup...ffnotes_17.asp
http://www.htpcnews.com/main.php?id=powerstrip_guide_1

Basically, it sounds like a timing issue that you're probably having, and Powerstrip will help you solve that problem. The answers should all be in the links though hopefully. Good luck
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Old 03-09-2005, 03:24 PM   #3 (permalink)
Crazy
 
Location: Salt Town, UT
Okay, this is something I have done.

S-Video can run at a maximum of 640x480'ish (aka, not good), so in order to actually use the HD part of your TV, you will either need to connect to your TV via DVI or Component (which has three seperate cables, red green and blue). Both of those can run at high definition resolution. After you get the proper cables in place (DVI is the easiest, component has to run through a converter), set your resolution to 1920x1080 (interlaced) for the highest resolution, or 1280x720 for a slightly lower, but progressive-scan instead of interlaced screen. On my display, 720p (1280x720) looks better, but 1080i (1920x1080) looks great for gaming.

About the edges of the screen not appearing, that is the way that TV's are built, 3-7% of the edge of the screen is lost to what is called "overscan". TV's are bulit that way so that you never get a border around the edge of your screen, and older TV's couldn't quite handle the precision necessary, so instead of undershooting the edge of the screen, they overshot it. With NVidia's latest driver, you have to seek for it, but it has some special HDTV modes, which basically just sets your screen to a slightly insane resolution that hopefully has less overscan than the standard resolutions. Powerstrip, to me, seemed to do more damage than good, so be a little wary about it, and it can't really do much on modern HDTV's (they typically are fixed-frequency for the high resolutions, and you can't adjust it enough to correct for the overscan).

PM me if you need any more help.
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Old 03-09-2005, 09:32 PM   #4 (permalink)
Psycho
 
damn!!!!!
So S-vid isnt the best....
DVI would cost me $200+ dollars!!!!
I need around 20 ft of cable to connect my cpu
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Old 03-13-2005, 10:38 AM   #5 (permalink)
Crazy
 
Location: Salt Town, UT
Sorry for the crappy URL. But I found one online for around $57 without even looking hard.

The $200 quote was probably because you were thinking of buying monster cables. Whenever you are given an oppourtunity to buy monster cables, don't.

Well, here is the link for the "cheap" extremely long DVI cable:
http://www.pccables.com/cgi-bin/orde...e=00696&rcode=
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Old 03-13-2005, 03:40 PM   #6 (permalink)
Psycho
 
hmm, i just went to futureshop.ca and the $200 was all they had, I have to check out this link, thanks!
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Old 03-15-2005, 08:31 PM   #7 (permalink)
Loser
 
I got a 2m DVI-HDMI cable for $30 shipped. I don't know if your TV has digital inputs (DVI or HDMI), but that's the way to go. Otherwise, either you'll need a hardware transcoder, or an ATI card with a component adapter - they equip their DVI ports to also send out analog component signals, given the right adapter (dongle).

If your 5200 has DVI, I'd try the cheap route first - www.atacom.com has cables. But remember, DVI and HDMI are digital. Component is analog. So unless you have a means of converting dig to an, then look out.

It's a slippery slope, as I have recently found out. I'm struggling with my ATI Radeon 9600 card and DVI-HDMI cable. Then we get into PowerStrip... Resolutions... Overscan... It's hard to be an early adopter...

G
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Old 03-18-2005, 01:00 AM   #8 (permalink)
High Honorary Junkie
 
Location: Tri-state.
AIT and NVidia talk about how they compensate for overscan: http://www.anandtech.com/multimedia/showdoc.aspx?i=2181

Not directly relevant but interesting.
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