Get an HDMI and you will see the diff' if your LCD is Full HD
Get an HDMI and you will see the diff' if your LCD is Full HD
I read about the Harvey Norman HDMI cable scam before I purchased a TV.
I told the salesperson to not even try selling me a $500 HDMI cable. So what did he do? He wanted to show me a comparison and showed me a split screen and the difference with their $500 cable. Very impressive, however a quick look at the back revealed the HDMI vs RCA.
I asked if I could see the comparison between the $500 HDMI cable and a $20 HDMI cable. Apparently not possible as they didn't sell $20 HDMI cables.
Thieving pricks!![]()
Nunquam Non Paratus
When I got my receiver from Hardly Normal, the guy wanted me to buy a $400 Monster Cable HDMI cable. I said no, he said $300. I said no, he said $200. I said no.... He got down to $75. It made me wonder how much they get them in for!!
One of my ex's used to work at Dick Smith and thru her I got a $70 optical cable for $4, and about 30m of OFC high quality speaker cable for < $1 a metre
These places really do mint it selling cables!
No they don't, component cables can do 1080i (and therefore 720p), only HDMI cables can carry 1080p. RCA is crap on any HD TV and only supports up to 576 or thereabouts.
Component cables can carry 1080p. HDCP-encoded signals will only allow 1080i down Component, but the Component cable itself is actually quite capable of carrying 1080p. A non-HDCP signal will output 1080p down Component. The other hindrance to 1080p down Component is the hardware (or software processing) waiting at the other end of the cable — some TVs can't display 1080p from Component. But it is possible. And in some instances, it can look "better" than HDMI (although that is highly subjective — horses for courses, different strokes etc.)
Yep, HDMI cables will carry the audio as well as the video whereas Component is video only.
Well you learn something everyday. Would I be right however that in most peoples situations, ie HD output (such as Blu-ray, etc) to HD TV via component would be only getting 1080i?
Last edited by onearmedbandit; 22nd September 2009 at 23:11.
Didjit has the right info.
You can throw that consumer articule out the window, plus the one that was in the herald recently. They were biased, poorly researched and poorly reported.
What it effectively says is if you're Joe Bloggs random who wouldn't know quality when they see it, particularly if running into a cheap lcd/plasma then you're going to feel ripped off with the expensive cable because you wont see the difference.
If, on the other hand, you have quality components (DVD/Blueray, quality screens) you are going to get the benefit out of the expensive cables.
The difference is more apparent the larger the screen and the higher the resolution. A 1080p native LCD projector is a prime example. The difference between cheap HDMI vs expensive HDMI is glaringly obvious.
If you dont care, then you'll be going for the cheap one...
From my info, even the oldest version of HDMI cable can support 1080p and a bit higher @ 60Hz and 24 bits per pixel.
If you're getting really fancy with high tech audio, deep colour, or 3D cinema etc I suggest you go for a more expensive HDMI version 1.4 cable as it has twice the bandwidth of our cables.
ok, can experts advise where S-video fits in the cable wars?
it's not a bad thing till you throw a KLR into the mix.
those cheap ass bitches can do anything with ductape.
(PostalDave on ADVrider)
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